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Kiviaq (born David Charles Ward; January 23, 1936 – April 24, 2016) was a Canadian Inuit lawyer, politician, and former sportsman. He was raised in Edmonton, Alberta.
In 1968, he became involved in politics, being elected to Edmonton city council. He had won the Vanier Award as one of Canada's "Five Most Outstanding Young Men," for his work as a Public Relations officer and recreational director for the city. Kiviaq had served on the Edmonton City Council as an alderman, and ran for mayor in the 1970s. As a personable politician, he successfully lobbied for the Commonwealth Games to be held in Edmonton. He ran his own open-line radio show at CJCA and [CJOI] before attending law school. With this, he was the first successful Inuk to become a lawyer, and was responsible for several important advances in establishing the legal rights of the Inuit people. He was called to the bar in 1983, a moment recognized in a letter from then-Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau as a "solid and progressive achievement in the history of your people." In September 2000, Mr. Ward made the initial application to change his name back to Kiviaq, the single-word Inuktituk name that his parents gave him when he was an infant, and in 2001, he won that right. In 2003, Edmonton mayor Bill Smith declared March 14 "Kiviaq Day".
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