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Lawyer Aaju Peter on her healing and reconciliation journey in 'Twice Colonized' doc

TORONTO 鈥 At the Copenhagen premiere of the new documentary 鈥淭wice Colonized鈥 in March, a young Greenlandic woman stood up in the audience and offered Aaju Peter 鈥渁 beautiful moment of realization.
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Aaju Peter appears in the documentary "Twice Colonized," directed by Lin Alluna. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Angela Gzowski **MANDATORY CREDIT**

TORONTO 鈥 At the Copenhagen premiere of the new documentary 鈥淭wice Colonized鈥 in March, a young Greenlandic woman stood up in the audience and offered Aaju Peter 鈥渁 beautiful moment of realization.鈥澛

鈥淪he said that it was the first time she had seen an image of herself being portrayed on a big screen,鈥 Peter, a renowned Inuk activist, lawyer and the film's main subject, said in a video interview.聽

鈥淭hat meant so much to me because we need to tell our story, not only the good side but also show that you can go through hardships and learn to deal with it.鈥

The experience further underlined why the 63-year-old born in Arkisserniaq, a village in the north of Kalaallit Nunaat -- also known as Greenland -- agreed to be in front of Danish filmmaker Lin Alluna's lens. Peter is also one of the film's executive producers and writers.聽

"Twice Colonized," which opened Toronto's 2023 Hot Docs film festival, centres on Peter, who has been an ardent defender of the rights of Indigenous Peoples in Denmark, Greenland and Canada.

Alluna shadowed Peter over the course of seven years, capturing her liberation from personal traumas and anger 鈥 including her forced assimilation and the unexpected death of her youngest son 鈥 and her pursuits to establish an Indigenous forum at the European Union.聽

鈥淚t's scary to just have somebody film you for all those years because they capture everything,鈥 said Peter. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a scary process to be so vulnerable and trusting, but I think Inuit are very trusting people and we believe the best in people 鈥 they took that trust to portray both sides of my story.鈥澛

After her parents sent her to Denmark to attend high school and live alone, as was the custom at the time, Peter said she was ultimately surrounded by those who didn't care about or understand her culture as she moved from one place to the next.聽

鈥淲hen you try to whiten-ize little Inuit, you separate them from their parents鈥ou separate them from their peers,鈥 she says in 鈥淭wice Colonized.鈥

It's a documentary that covers the highs and lows of her journey as a campaigner, activist, and lawyer who often worked as an adviser for both the United Nations and the European Union 鈥 a task motivated by a familiar feeling of having one鈥檚 identity stripped away.聽

鈥淲hen I would go to the European Parliament to protest their anti-sealing legislation and how wrong they were, I was all by myself and felt so alone鈥o tiny and minuscule,鈥 said Peter, who currently resides in Iqaluit, the capital of Nunavut.

鈥淚 felt like a fly on the wall to them鈥hey are legislating our culture, our economy, and our society through the backdoor and they are all the way in Europe, so I know how important it has been to have Indigenous Peoples represented in the European Union so we can have a collective voice.鈥

Peter said she prefers to marry the issues she tackles before courts or legislative bodies with her own life trials to illustrate that she isn鈥檛 a "100-year-old romanticized vision of an Inuit survivor."

For the majority of the 92-minute documentary, Peter allows the camera to venture in strikingly close, exposing her moments of grief. In the film, she is shedding tears over old footage of her youngest son singing 鈥淚 Love You Too Much鈥 by Diego Luna and having curse-filled arguments with her then-boyfriend, who objected to the making of the film.聽

Alethea Arnaquq-Baril, activist, 鈥淭wice Colonized鈥 co-producer, and director of 2016 seal hunting doc 鈥淎ngry Inuk,鈥 said she experienced mixed emotions watching a woman she idolized as a child be so vulnerable.聽

鈥淥n the surface of things it was heart-wrenching to see her struggle with things that happened to her that weren鈥檛 her fault,鈥 said Arnaquq-Baril. 鈥淥n another, it was obviously inspiring because a story like hers helps you feel as if you can keep going鈥.it pushes me to be more brave.鈥

Arnaquq-Baril, who featured Peter in her previous projects 鈥淎ngry Inuk鈥 and "Tunniit: Retracing the Lines of Inuit Tattoos,鈥 says she joined "Twice Colonized" in 2019 after Peter brought Alluna to an invite-only dinner of hers, camera in hand.聽

鈥淪he was just this random white lady that showed up with a camera on and I was like, what鈥檚 going on?鈥 she said through laughter in reference to the filmmaker she now calls a friend.聽

When Lin approached co-producers Emile Hertling P茅ronard, Stacey Aglok MacDonald and Arnaquq-Baril about joining the project, it took seeing footage of Peter to convince them the documentary would be sensitive to the Inuit.

Working with Alluna to paint a different picture of Peter also shifted Arnaquq-Baril's own views about herself.聽

鈥淚 tried to make a close and personal film with Aaju in 鈥淎ngry Inuk鈥 and it ended up being more of an issue-based film instead because I didn鈥檛 know how to pull that other side of her,鈥 she said.聽

鈥淚鈥檝e idolized her since she was a kid and it must have been difficult for her to just be a person in front of me鈥t just reminds me that I need to be human always and not worry about being a role model鈥t鈥檚 inspired me to just allow myself to be myself.鈥澛

For Peter, the mission has always been centring and elevating the humanity of her people.

鈥淚鈥檝e realized during these interviews that our ancestors have been here ten times longer than Westerners, Europeans who came to Canada and colonized us and it鈥檚 important to recognize that we should be the government,鈥 said Peter.

鈥淲e should be standing up higher to lead the country where there is so much respect for the environment. Inuit and Indigenous Peoples in Europe and Canada need to be heard."

聽"Twice Colonized" will be shown in select Canadian theatres throughout May.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 10, 2023.

Noel Ransome, The Canadian Press

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