Mary Jane’s piece was
about her husband, Georgie, and how he is an inspiration for
continuing the tradition of living off the land.
Brandon decided to
do a piece on how the Caribou Fence was created.
Stanley Grafton
Njootli, a visual artist, decided he wanted to make a piece with his
3-year old son in Gwich’in. Stan had been in a documentary (about
him and his father, and his decision to move to Old Crow in his 20s
after never living there before). The film is entitled
Arctic
Son.
Mackenzie created a stop-motion animation in the Blackfoot
language.
Elder Joel Peter also made a piece about living his life in Old Crow. He shared what he knows especially about Muskrat trapping. This was a really special experience, and reaffirmed the importance of including more elders in the Our World project as storytellers. They hold wisdom about the
environment, the language, the culture and traditional values that
are so important for future generations. These real connections to traditions
that have existed for 20,000 years.
Hunting, trapping, living off the land – these are all things that
people base a lot of their livelihood and existence on. We hope these short
films can help to celebrate and connect generations and to important
community values.
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Brandon works on Caribou Fence |
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Brandon, Dean and Elisa working hard! |
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An office turned recording studio... |
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Mary Jane helps Dean with his Gwich'in pronunciation |
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Recording with Dean and his Dad |
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DEAN DEAN! |
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Mary Jane and Lisa g have FUN! |
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Editing! |
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