Nuu-Chah-Nulth: Reclaiming Tradition
Logline:
The Nuu-chah-nulth First Nations of Vancouver Island, BC are decolonizing indigenous education. They are integrating language, tradition, and land-based skills into their school curriculum to save their culture from the brink of extinction and offer a different future for the next generations.
Synopsis:
There are few elders left who speak Nuu-chah-nulth, the traditional language of the First Nations peoples along the west coast of Vancouver Island. Many are survivors of the last residential school in BC, which closed in 1983. As more knowledge keepers pass on every year, the Nuu-chah-nulth Nations are fighting to keep their culture alive. “What happens when we go? What happens when we pass away?” asks an elder.
For over a thousand years, the 14 tribes that make up the Nuu-chah-nulth nations have lived in balance with nature. Now, we see them turning to land-based skills as a tool for cultural reclamation. We meet a fisherwomen, a culture & language teacher, and a totem pole carver. All three committed to passing down their knowledge.
They believe that only when the next generation is reconnected with their true identity, will their potential be realized. That education can be a part of the solution, if more space is made for indigenous ways of knowing in the classroom. “It was lost within schools, allow them to relearn within the school system,” suggests another elder.
The Nuu-chah-nulth are part of a shifting tide across Canada, who are fighting earnestly for their land, rights and sovereignty. Each community doing what they can to heal wounds from the past and reclaim what was stolen.
-
Mike MorashDirector, DOP & Editor
-
Neil FergusonProducer
-
Andrew CrandellCamera Operator
-
Aislinn BelotSound Design
-
Francis JackKey Cast
-
Celina CharlesonKey Cast
-
Peter HansonKey Cast
-
Brenda JohnsonKey Cast
-
Beulah HowardKey Cast
-
Eva JohnsonKey Cast
-
Vince SmithKey Cast
-
Daniel BlackstoneKey Cast
-
Russell HansonKey Cast
-
Daisy HansonKey Cast
-
Project Type:Documentary, Short
-
Genres:Indigenous, culture, human rights, colonialism, reconciliation, indigeneity, documentary, reclamation
-
Runtime:17 minutes 3 seconds
-
Completion Date:September 20, 2021
-
Production Budget:15,000 USD
-
Country of Origin:Canada
-
Country of Filming:Canada
-
Language:English
-
Shooting Format:4K
-
Aspect Ratio:16:9
-
Film Color:Color
-
First-time Filmmaker:No
-
Student Project:No
-
Montreal Independent Film FestivalMontreal
Canada
Best Short Documentary -
New Wave Short Film FestivalMunich
Germany
Best Short Documentary -
Canada Shorts Film FestivalBurnaby
Canada
Finalist -
British Columbia Environmental Film FestivalVancouver
Canada
Official Selection -
Toronto Documentary Feature & Short Film FestivalToronto
Canada
Official Selection -
Short Circuit Pacific Rim Film FestivalVictoria
Canada
Official Selection -
Canada Shorts - Canadian & International Short Film FestVancouver
Canada
Finalist
Mike Morash is a director and editor based out of Victoria, British Columbia. Mike started making impact driven films when studying Political Science at the University of Victoria. After finishing his degree, he founded One Island Media, a production company focused on supporting research institutions, non-profit organizations, and indigenous communities.
“Nuu-Chah-Nulth: Reclaiming Tradition” is part of his recent exploration into longer form content. He is currently editing another short documentary titled “Never Made It Home,” which profiles Lhtako Dené residential school survivors. He hopes to continue working with Canada’s indigenous, with a feature length documentary and episodic television series currently in pre-production.
"Working alongside the Nuu-chah-nulth Nations has had a truly profound impact on my relationship with Canada as a nation state. As children we all learned, to some degree, about the history of residential schools in our country but rarely, if ever, did we discuss the ongoing intergenerational effects of this history. Learning about these atrocities through first-hand accounts has been an eye opening experience, one that has motivated a newfound passion to aid these communities in the deconstruction of systems of marginalization and oppression. I hope to continue this line of work and expose more of these stories to the silver screen."