
Revitalization and reclamation at heart of Kwanlin traditional tattoo gathering
CBC
Ashley Cummings is smiling as her chin gets poked over and over with a needle.
"Hurts a little bit, but not too bad," she says after the work is done. "It's worth it."
Cummings is being tattooed at the Kwanlin Traditional Tattoo Gathering in Whitehorse. The first of its kind, the gathering brought four Indigenous tattoo artists, plus apprentices, to the Kwanlin Dün Cultural Centre over three days, from May 9 to 12.
Cummings is from Pangnirtung, Nunavut, and now lives in Whitehorse. She calls the tattooing an act of reclamation.
"Inuit almost lost our tattoos entirely," she said.
"Now, there's some really stellar women that are being matriarchs and bringing it back to us."
For Cummings and other participants, that's what this event is all about — taking back traditional tattoo practices. It's a way to reclaim identity, and find others with a shared past.
That's how Holly Nordlum sees it. Nordlum, on the other end of the needle, is a tattoo artist and has been for over a decade.
Nordlum, an Inuk from Kotzebue, Alaska, who now lives in Anchorage, says there's something powerful about poking the skin and talking about "hard stuff."
The key, she said, is "finding joy in hard stuff."
"It really does make you who you are."
To Nordlum, hard stuff means shared trauma — substance abuse, sexual abuse, "all those big issues that have affected us for generations," she says.
That's what comes up most often between her and her clients, she says.
She's travelled to other places with their own tattooing traditions, like New Zealand and Hawaii. In both places, traditional practices were also harmed by colonization and missionaries.













