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This week, Valerie and Kyle examine one of the most disturbing and least discussed policies in modern Canadian history: the High Arctic relocation.

In the 1950s, Inuit families were moved more than 2,000 kilometres north from their homes in Northern Quebec to remote Arctic settlements. Promised better hunting, housing, and support, they instead arrived to isolation, scarcity, and a future they did not choose.

Drawing on survivor testimony, including the story of Paula Ikuutaq Rumbolt, as well as historical documentation, the findings of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, and Canada’s 2010 formal apology, this episode explores how Cold War sovereignty fears shaped federal policy and how those decisions reshaped lives for generations.

This is not a story about harsh weather.

It is a story about power, displacement, and what happens when human beings are treated as political tools.

The cold was not the cruelest part. Being treated as expendable was.

Edited by Kyle McDonnell