Groceries in Nunavut

An Innu child is carried in an amautik by her mother who is paying for groceries in Baker Lake, Nunavut in this March 2009 file photo. (Nathan Denette / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

 

IQALUIT, Nunavut -- The line-up for Iqaluit's soup kitchen stretches out the door, down a flight of wooden steps and onto the icy street. Dozens of people wait patiently in -40 C cold, braced against the gusting shards of wind.

 

Inside, Cathy Sawer stirs an industrial-sized pot brimming with chicken soup, enough for 200 servings. The 65-year-old and her fellow volunteers have been in the kitchen since 8 a.m., preparing a lunch that will be the only meal of the day for many of those waiting outside.

 

"You wish you could always do more, but there's only so many hours in a day," Sawer said.