Looking for your Valentine? Facebook group plays matchmaker for Inuit singles
The group started last month and already has more than 300 members
If you've been finding the dating scene in your Arctic community a little chilly, there's a new way to find love across the North — a Facebook group for single Inuit.
Started by an Inuk in Toronto, the group Uvanga Amma Ivvi, (literal translation: me and you), or the Inuit Casual Dating Group in English, is a place for Inuit to meet each other.
Angela Aula created the group in January, and since then it has grown to more than 300 members.
Aula has lived in Toronto for the last 25 years and met her partner at a McDonald's 11 years ago. Now they have two kids together.
For "months and months" she's been thinking about the opportunities she has access to that Inuit in the North may not — like meeting a stranger at a coffee shop or options for dating apps.
Rather than create an app, she decided to keep it simple and use a platform already common — and fast-loading on slow internet — across the North.
"Facebook has a lot of Inuit, like [the group] Inuit Hunting Stories of the Day, or other Inuit communities have Facebook groups, and also I don't know if anybody would find Inuit dating groups in a [dating] website," said Aula.
She said she was nervous about people laughing at the idea, but eventually decided it could be helpful.
"I had a lot of cousins who had a hard time finding love," said Aula. Until she was eight years old, she lived in the fly-in community of Hall Beach, Nunavut, which has a population of less than 900.
Some of her cousins have joined and then left because they wanted to find love the "old-fashioned way," but despite their reaction, she says she's getting good feedback.
Aula doesn't know if there's been any successful dates from the group yet — she says she tries not to pry. She's put some security in place, including making the group private and asking potential members if they are Inuit, single and over 18 before approving them.
As memberships grow, the break-out group chats have grown to include an LGBTQ chat, chats based on regions — from Greenland to Montreal — and different age categories.
Struggles of dating in the North
Alexia Cousins is finding there's not plenty of fish in Iqaluit. She's 30, single with a daughter, and is not "not" looking for love, she says.
"You're related to like 60 or 70 per cent of the population. That's one thing. Another is I find there seems to be a lack of commitment — between any partner really, and those who might show up on dating sites or try to buy you a drink at the bar are actually in relationships," she said.
Cousins has also lived in Toronto and New Brunswick so she can compare the differences of dating in the South versus in Nunavut.
"I mean you have a bigger pile to pick from when you live down south ... so it made it easier."
She said the Facebook group could help some people, but she hasn't joined it.
"You get to see other people on there that you know you might not know, but Nunavut is a large territory, so even if you did meet someone from a different community — there's distance — then with airfare being so expensive who knows what could actually come from it," Cousins said.
She's going to stick with trying to meet people offline, as she hasn't had much luck with any kind of online dating.
For fun, she loads up Tinder on her phone. The first potential match, she says, is a 25-year-old guy who's 2,000 kilometres away. The man says he just wants to stay warm this winter.
Beyond that suggestion, Tinder says there's no one new around her.