Canadian Postage: 2022 Indigenous Leaders – Jose Kusugak Domestic Stamps
Canadian Postage: 2022 Indigenous Leaders – Jose Kusugak Domestic Stamps
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Canadian Postage: 2022 Indigenous Leaders – Jose Kusugak Domestic Stamps

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Permanent, domestic-rate stamps are required for regular-sized letters, postcards, and cards weighing up to 30 grams (about 5 sheets of paper).

Please note: these stamps are sent in sets of 6. Order one item for 6 stamps. 

This stamp, part of the inaugural three-stamp Indigenous Leaders issue, pays tribute to Jose Kusugak – Inuit activist, linguist and broadcaster – who, through his decades of hard work, was a major contributor to securing the land claims that led to the creation of Nunavut in 1999.

Considered by some to be a Father of Confederation for his pivotal role in the creation of Nunavut, Jose Kusugak (1950-2011) dedicated his life to raising awareness of Inuit identity and issues in Canada. Kusugak was born in Repulse Bay, Northwest Territories (now Naujaat, Nunavut) and attended residential school as a child. He began his career as a teacher, working at the University of Saskatchewan’s Eskimo Language School and the Churchill Vocational Centre in Manitoba, where he later served as a cultural and linguistic adviser. As head of the Inuit Language Commission in the 1970s, he was involved in developing a standardized, dual writing system for Inuktitut, using Roman orthography and syllabics.

In the years leading up to Nunavut’s creation, Kusugak used his natural ability as a communicator to explain the land claim concept to Inuit communities across the Arctic and lent his talent and leadership to many other roles. An award-winning broadcaster and the president of Nunavut Tunngavik Incorporated, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami and the Kivalliq Inuit Association, Kusugak was an honest and devoted advocate for his people, whom he described as “First Canadians, Canadians First.”

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