It's obviously a complex issue with many facets to it.
I'll just say, I was in Resolute last weekend, and I was heartened to meet a young Inuit man, 19 years of age, who had been taught by his family traditional ways of hunting. He was a hunter of polar bears and of beluga whales, and he was showing us how that had been passed on to him. He was wearing sealskin pants, and when I asked him about that, he said he had learned that in school. I was heartened to see that in the curriculum there, they were adapting these traditional ways, so that when he's out on the land, he's wearing something that he's made himself. He is a very resourceful, resilient young man who will be going to the Arctic Winter Games, because he also runs sled dogs and had built his own sled.
Those are things that are happening in the community without additional efforts from us. It's the space of traditions being passed on.
You talked about colonialism. If we step back and let traditional ways set in, that's what you get. I think that's a good solution.
I walked over—