CBC Nunavut broadcaster hangs up her headphones after 2 decades on the air
CBC
Aseena Mablick first joined CBC North in 1996 for a two-week training gig.
She retired on Friday, after more than two decades as an interviewer and host based in Iqaluit.
"Two weeks became long, long years," she said, laughing.
Mablick got her start recording meetings and doing interviews. She first got on the air as a backup host for Moses Attagoyuk. When he retired, around 2002, she took the helm of the popular Inuit-language afternoon show, Tausunni.
The show was founded by the late Jonah Kelly and former Nunavut Commissioner Ann Meekitjuk Hanson, Mablick recalls. It became a place where people could hear old time stories from elders as well as explorations of current events.
Tausunni means, roughly, "the smell of human."
It's the term used by animals in Inuit legends, Mablick said.
"Whenever they smell human beings nearby, in legend stories, they call humans 'tau,'" she said, meaning "dark." "I don't know why, maybe from something they smell from us."
The suffix "-sunni" translates roughly to "smells like."
Mablick said the show founders deliberately picked the name so the show would be stamped with the legends.
"They wanted to keeping that traditional cultural way of living. Anything physical, spiritual, emotional and [for] survival out on the land."
Broadcasting for an hour and a half every weekday in Inuktitut, Mablick is being remembered as someone who contributed a lot to the Inuit language, and in particular, Inuktitutlataaq, the language used by elders.
Even as a child, Mablick said, she had questions for her elders. Working on the show for so long was a chance to pose questions directly to elders herself.
"When you start working for CBC, you become a good interviewer," she said.