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We Were Children is a 2012 Canadian documentary film about the experiences of First Nations children in the Canadian Indian residential school system. [2] [3] [4]Directed by Tim Wolochatiuk and written by Jason Sherman, the film recounts the experiences of two residential school survivors: Lyna Hart, who was sent to the Guy Hill Residential School in Manitoba at age 4; and Glen Anaquod, who ...
The documentary — a devastating portrait of an Indigenous community coming to terms with a past forced on it by Canada's residential school system — premiered at the 2024 Sundance Film ...
Sugarcane is a 2024 documentary film, directed by Julian Brave NoiseCat and Emily Kassie and produced by Emily Kassie and Kellen Quinn. It follows an investigation into the Canadian Indian residential school system, igniting a reckoning in the lives of survivors and descendants.
A documentary about the legacy of residential schools, looking at the work of the Cariboo Tribal Council in addressing the impact of residential schools on their people. It touches on the historical background of these schools, though primarily depicting painful personal experiences; the causes of multi-generational grief and healing processes ...
When documentary filmmaker Emily Kassie asked her colleague and friend Julian Brave NoiseCat to co-direct a film about the abuses surrounding Indigenous boarding schools in Canada, neither one ...
Sleeping Children Awake is a Canadian feature-length, documentary video outlining the history of the residential school system and its effect on generations of First Nations’ people. The video was first released in 1992, to a premiere theatrical screening and broadcast on Thunder Bay Television .
The school is the subject of a new series titled “The Program: Cons, Cults and Kidnapping.” Oakdale man recounts his experience at boarding school featured in Netflix documentary Skip to main ...
Our Spirits Don't Speak English (2008) is a documentary film about Native American boarding schools attended by young people mostly from the mid-19th to the mid-20th centuries. It was filmed by the Rich Heape company and directed by Chip Richie.