2020 Archive
Title | Athabasca | Edmonton |
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The Long Ride Home The Long Ride Home is about years of Inter-generational trauma that caused an over representation of Indigenous children in care causing further trauma and leading to dangerous coping methods and often death. A brave group of Indigenous people leave on a nomadic horseback journey that is 600 kms long. Powered only by their Spirit and tradition they attempt to spark change, bring awareness of the Missing Indigenous women, 60s Scoop survivors and bring their children home. | January 24th | |
Date | ||
Gifts from the Elders - 60 mins. Gifts from the Elders documentary follows five Anishinaabe youth on a summer research project with their Elders. The stories shared with the Elders' youth guide them on a journey back to proceeding generations that lived a healthy lifestyle off of the land. Their stories chronicle the devastating impact that environmental and cultural dispossession had on the flow of knowledge from Elders to youth and ultimately on their people's health. As their summer comes to an end, the youth emerge with “gifts” of knowledge and teachings from their Elders, inspiring a renewed determination to forge a hopeful and healthy future for the next generation. | May 2020 - Elders' Stories | |
The Sacred Relationship: Healing the Water, Healing Ourselves - 60 mins. The Sacred Relationship explores how reconciling the relationship between Indigenous people and Canada can lead to healthier water. Featuring Indigenous Elders and top Western scientists, The Sacred Relationship explores Indigenous worldview, water and ceremony, European settlement and colonization, reconciliation, and common ground between Indigenous and Western science. | ||
Sex, Spirit, Strength - 45 mins. Indigenous people face some of the highest rates of sexual and physical violence, substance abuse, HIV, and suicide in Canada. However, statistics never tell the whole story. Sex, Spirit, Strength follows Michael and Jack, two young Indigenous men, as they shed the stigma and shame associated with sexual health and gender identity. Michael, as a former addict who lived a high-risk lifestyle that left him with permanent scars. Jack, a transgender gay man, is committed to bringing pride back to two-identity through education and activism. With compassionate eyes, Sex, Spirit, Strength takes a candid look at these two brave young men's challenges and triumphs as they reconcile their past, embrace their identities, and strive to make a positive difference in their communities. | June 2020 - Two Spirit Stories | |
Journey of Indigenous Gender Identity - 23 mins. The Journey of Gender Identity traces the gender diverse/Two-Spirit Indigenous people through their pre-contact and then after residential schools. We learn what that journey means for the future Two-Spirit people on Turtle Island today. | ||
Trans and Native: Meet an Indigenous Doctor Giving Them Hope - Dr. James Makokis 8 mins. What is it like to provide trans care on an Indigenous reserve that serves 2,400.00 people in central Alberta? For this Two-Spirit Cree doctor, it's more than his job. Dr. Makokis created a unique approach to transgender care, combining Indigenous and Western teachings. | ||
Nowhere Land - 15 mins. This short documentary serves as a quiet elegy for a way of life, which only exists now in the memories of those who experienced it. Bonnie Ammaaq and her family remember vividly. When Bonnie was a little girl, her parents packed up their essentials, bundled her, and younger brother onto a long, fur-lined sled, and left the government manufactured community of Igloolik to live off the land had generations of Inuit before them. | July 2020- Inuit and Inuk Stories | |
Three Thousand - 14 mins. In this short film, Inuk artist Asinnajaq plunges us into a sublime imaginary universe - 14 minutes of luminescent, archive-inspired cinema that recast the present, past, and future her people in a radiant new light. | ||
Timuti - 30 mins. In this short film, artist Jobie Weetaluktuk turns his gaze on his family and the power of ritual through the story of a young woman and her unplanned child. In Inukjuak, an Inuit community in the Eastern Arctic, a baby boy has come into this world, and they call him Timuti, a name that recurs across generations of his people, evoking Timutis alive and dead, who will nourish his spirit and shape his destiny. | ||
Freedom Road: Context - 55 mins Freedom Road is a five-part documentary series (15 mins each) that tells the inspiring story of one First Nation's battle to resolve a brutal colonial legacy that uprooted and transformed a self-sustaining community into an isolated island, only a short distance from the Trans-Canada highway. Men - Part 2: 15 mins. | ||
The Power of Spirit - 45 mins. What happens to a young child who is removed from their home? Seven generations of Canadians know first-hand. Trust was broken, love was lost, and respect was challenged. In The Power of the Spirit, several Indigenous families share their stories about how they attempted to overcome residential schools' impact. | ||
Treaty Talk - Sharing the River of Life - 50 mins. A 50-minute teaching tool to understand our collective responsibility to the treaties better. The purpose of this video is to build understanding, allyship, and work together. Through sharing of a traditional Cree understanding of natural law and treaty, will explore and model how Indigenous nations and non-Indigenous allies in Canada can come together to transform racism and discrimination at a local and systemic level and to build a future of mutual benefit. | ||
Jordan River Anderson – The Messenger Alanis Obomsawin's 52nd film tells the story of how the life of Jordan River Anderson initiated a battle for the right of First Nations and Inuit children to receive the same standard of social, health and, educational services as the rest of the Canadian population. | October 2020 | |
November 2020 - The Road Forward The Road Forward, a musical documentary by Marie Clements, connects a pivotal moment in Canada’s civil rights history - the beginnings of Indian Nationalism in the 1930s - with the powerful momentum of First Nations activism today. The Road Forward’s stunningly shot musical sequences, performed by an ensemble of some of Canada’s finest vocalists and musicians, seamlessly connect past and present with soaring vocals, blues, rock, and traditional beats. A rousing tribute to the fighters for First Nations rights, a soul-resounding historical experience, and a visceral call to action. | November 2020 | |
Birth of a Family In this deeply moving feature-length documentary, three sisters and a brother meet for the first time. Removed from their young Dene mother during the infamous Sixties Scoop, they were separated as infants and adopted into families across North America. Betty Ann, Esther, Rosalie, and Ben were only four of the 20,000 Indigenous Canadian children taken from their families between 1955 and 1985, to be either adopted into white families or live in foster care. As the four siblings piece together their shared history, their connection deepens, and their family begins to take shape. | December 2020 |
Updated January 22, 2021 by Digital & Web Operations (web_services@athabascau.ca)