Two people hugging.

‘Nunavut, stand up. Eekeeluak Avalak says, “This is all of our moment; we did it.

Eekeeluak Avalak is golden again.

The 19-year-old from Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, won his first gold medal at the North American Indigenous Games in Halifax on Wednesday. It was his second gold medal for the territory.

“History’s been made. Nunavut, stand up. After the game, which was livestreamed on the CBC Nunavut Facebook page, he told CBC through tears, “This is our moment, we did it.” 

Avalak’s opponent from Manitoba, Jerin Coles, fought him for two rounds, and Avalak won both. 

After he won, Avalak put his head in his hands and fell to the ground. He then hugged his long-time coach, Chris Crooks. The Dauphinee Centre in Halifax erupted with cheers from other Nunavut athletes as Avalak’s teammates rushed onto the mat to hug him and one of them gave him a Nunavut flag to wear.

“I’m just very happy,” he said. 

WATCH: Eekeeluak Avalak wins gold at NAIG

Avalak said that he thought about his aunt, who died last week while he was at a training camp before the games, during his match. He told her that he played the game for her. 

“I just heard that… “I was thinking about her,” he added. 

Avalak wasn’t alone at this tournament. Thirteen other wrestlers from Nunavut were standing behind him, pounding the plexiglass around the wrestling arena as the young athlete scored point after point.

A group of people stand behind the Nunavut flag.

Nunavut’s wrestlers dominated on the mat at the games, going up against other Indigenous athletes from across North America.

They were also the loudest in the room.

Cheers of, “Eekee! Eekee!” and “Nuna-what? Nunavut!” echoed across the arena each time a wrestler from Nunavut took to the mat. 

Bronze for Arviat wrestle

This was Thayer Komakjuak’s first competition, but the 18-year-old from Arviat blew away his opponents, ultimately winning a bronze medal.

“I didn’t expect to make it this far but I did it,” Komakjuak said in Inuktitut after his match.

Chasity St. John, also from Arviat, won fifth place, pinning her opponent in the first round. 

“I’m so happy!” St. John said when she came off the mat.

A girl runs, holding a flag high in the air and grinning.

For Morgan Kakuktinniq from Rankin Inlet, this competition was a chance to wrestle. The 18-year-old can’t compete against anyone at territorial competitions in Nunavut because there aren’t any athletes in his weight class.

“They said come to a bigger competition and you’ll find somebody,” he said. 

Without anyone his size back home, Kakutinniq watches YouTube videos and sometimes even wrestles two people at once.

“You can’t really work on technique but I do what I can.”

For his first competition, he made it all the way to the end, placing fourth in his bronze medal match.

“It feels awesome. I love watching my teammates wrestle because they’ve got a lot of spirit,” he said. 

“It’s an amazing feeling. It’s what makes it worth it.”

Nunavut wrestling coach Chris Crooks said his team has a “family atmosphere.”

“We’ll cook meals together, go horseback riding. The team, in a way, is bigger than the individual,” he said. 

“There’s nothing that we don’t talk about and discuss. We support each other.”

Several people sit in a stadium behind plexiglass, holding up bright flags.

As for his team’s standout performance at the games, Crooks said it’s not about medals.

“I’m not looking to build champions … It’s really about developing character that will carry them much further in life than a gold medal will,” he said. 

As for Avalak, he plans to head home to Cambridge Bay before he starts university at the University of Alberta in the fall. 

“Find your passion, take risks. Go for it. It’s going to be scary, but it will be worth it,” Avalak said.