The Uranium Fim Festival in Window Rock (AZ), the capital of the Navajo Nation focuses on films about nuclear power, the nuclear industry, uranium mining, nuclear waste and nuclear weapons, and their impacts. Films about victims and environmental consequences of the nuclear fuel chain from mining to radioactive nuclear waste.

The Window Rock International Uranium Film Festival is a project by the 2010 founded International Uranium Film Festival (IUFF) that was voted one of the “25 Coolest Film Festivals in the World 2024” by MovieMaker Magazine in Hollywood. In 2025, the IUFF founders Márcia Gomes de Oliveira from Brazil and Norbert Suchanek accepted the Nuclear-Free Future Award (Education).

Klee Benally Earth Protector Award for Best Indigenous Filmmaker.

With the Klee Benally Earth Protector Award we remember and honor Diné (Navajo) Musician, Traditional Dancer, Artist, Filmmaker and Indigenous Anarchist Klee Benally, who died at the age of 48, on December 30, 2023, in Arizona.

Klee is originally from Black Mesa and has worked nearly all of his life at the front lines in struggles to protect Indigenous sacred lands. He particularly advocated against uranium mining and for the cleanup of the more than 500 abandoned uranium mines that continue to contaminate the Navajo Nation territory. In his last book “No Spiritual Surrender: Indigenous Anarchy in Defense of the Sacred“, he writes, “If history is written by the conquerors, it will be unwritten by those who refuse to be conquered.”

The „Klee Benally Earth Protector Award“ comes with a prize money of US $ 1,000 donated by a collective of grassroots individuals.

1. The films should be directed or produced by Indigenous directors or producers and address nuclear issues.

2. The films by non-Indigenous directors or producers should focus on Indigenous peoples affected by nuclear issues.

3. The films can have been produced at any time.

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  • Guy Morgan


    Being part of the Window Rock international Uranium Film Festival was a truly fantastic experience. The entire event felt natural, welcoming, and incredibly authentic. From the moment we arrived, we were warmly received—both as filmmakers and as human beings whose stories matter.

    What stood out most was the spirit of the festival. It’s not just about films, but about people, community, and the real struggles and resilience behind these stories. The organizers, the audience, and the fellow filmmakers created an atmosphere that was honest, supportive, and deeply respectful of the work being shared.

    I’m grateful to have been included. It was an honor to screen our film at Window Rock, and I would gladly be part of this festival again. I highly recommend it to any filmmaker working in environmental, Indigenous, or human rights storytelling.
    Director, Guy Morgan
    Documentary, Film, If the silence could be broken

    December 2025