Qiliqti was born on January 6, 1931, near
Lancaster Sound on
Devon Island. Qiliqti was the daughter of a white member of the
RCMP and an Inuk woman named Ataguttiaq. However, she was raised by her adoptive father, named Qamaniq, who was a hunter. When Qiliqti was a year old, her family returned to the
Mittimatalik/Pond Inlet area, where her mother was from. She lived in her family's hunting camps in the Mittimatalik region, where her father would catch
whales and
seals and birds. Her father would do most of the hunting, assisted by her older brother. Qiliqti had four siblings in total. When Qiliqti was older, she had another sister, but she died at the age of 2. After Qiliqti's younger sister died, her mother had another daughter. When Qiliqti was five or six, she learned how to read and write in the
Inuktitut language. She learned from her mother and from an
Inuktitut bible. Her parents were
baptized when she was five into the
Anglican faith. After they were baptized, they were told to stop singing traditional Inuit songs (ajaajaa), and to sing hymns instead. As a result, Qiliqti did not learn the ajaajaa until she was an adult. Qiliqti was baptized at the age of 11; at that point, she was given the name Elisapee. Following their conversion to Christianity, her community would gather themselves together to pray on Sunday; when there was no minister, the wisest person around would deliver a sermon. The Christian minister required the Inuit to not work on Sunday, have only one wife, to not swap wives, and to be kind to each other. There were no medical workers in Mittimatalik until Ootoova was an adult, so all medical care was done according to traditional Inuit knowledge. There were no radios until the 1960s. == Adult years ==