This is a program of short and mid-length films including: When the Children Left, Joe Buffalo, The Train Station, Mashkawi-Manidoo Bimaadiziwin: Spirit to Soar.
Please join us for ReFrame's OPENING NIGHT event which features a keynote address by celebrated journalist Tanya Talaga who co-directed the film, Mashkawi-Manidoo Bimaadiziwin Spirit to Soar, and a musical performance by Ansley Simpson who created the soundtrack. The Opening Night will begin with a ceremony led by Elder Shirley Williams. This event is free and open to the public, worldwide.
Content warning: these films discuss experiences of attending Residential Schools, and children who have gone missing.
Links for support:
The Indian Residential Schools Resolution Health Support Program (IRSRHSP) provides safe, confidential, respectful, and non-judgmental mental health and emotional support services to eligible former Indian Residential School students and their families.
Crisis Line provides immediate emotional support for former Indian Residential School students. Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Call 1-866-925-4419
Native Women's Association of Canada Elder Support Line | Canada-Wide
Available Monday-Friday 9AM-11AM EST & 1PM-3PM EST
Call 888-664-7808
First Nations, Métis & Inuit Hope for Wellness Help Line | Canada-Wide
If you’re experiencing emotional distress and want to talk, call the First Nations, Métis & Inuit Hope for Wellness Help Line, available 24/7, Canada-wide.
Call 1-855-242-3310
With no high school in their community, the people of Shoal Lake 40 First Nation must send their children away from home at only 14 years old in order to access secondary educational opportunities. To honour the memory of her sister and her untimely passing in 1989, Angeline McLeod highlights the barriers her community faces around education. The film delivers a scathing indictment on systemic and urgent issues brought on by these social injustices through the use of home videos and childhood memories.
SPONSORED BY:
Website | Facebook | Instagram
Community based nonprofit promoting positive race relations. Promoting and protecting human rights and diversity in Peterborough.
Our members, both indigenous and non-indigenous, learn together. We do our best to become an example of what reconciliation looks like: people working together and treating each other with respect, justice and equality.
- Year2019
- Runtime11 minutes
- CountryCanada
- DirectorCharlene Moore
- ScreenwriterCharlene Moore
- ProducerCharlene Moore
This is a program of short and mid-length films including: When the Children Left, Joe Buffalo, The Train Station, Mashkawi-Manidoo Bimaadiziwin: Spirit to Soar.
Please join us for ReFrame's OPENING NIGHT event which features a keynote address by celebrated journalist Tanya Talaga who co-directed the film, Mashkawi-Manidoo Bimaadiziwin Spirit to Soar, and a musical performance by Ansley Simpson who created the soundtrack. The Opening Night will begin with a ceremony led by Elder Shirley Williams. This event is free and open to the public, worldwide.
Content warning: these films discuss experiences of attending Residential Schools, and children who have gone missing.
Links for support:
The Indian Residential Schools Resolution Health Support Program (IRSRHSP) provides safe, confidential, respectful, and non-judgmental mental health and emotional support services to eligible former Indian Residential School students and their families.
Crisis Line provides immediate emotional support for former Indian Residential School students. Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Call 1-866-925-4419
Native Women's Association of Canada Elder Support Line | Canada-Wide
Available Monday-Friday 9AM-11AM EST & 1PM-3PM EST
Call 888-664-7808
First Nations, Métis & Inuit Hope for Wellness Help Line | Canada-Wide
If you’re experiencing emotional distress and want to talk, call the First Nations, Métis & Inuit Hope for Wellness Help Line, available 24/7, Canada-wide.
Call 1-855-242-3310
With no high school in their community, the people of Shoal Lake 40 First Nation must send their children away from home at only 14 years old in order to access secondary educational opportunities. To honour the memory of her sister and her untimely passing in 1989, Angeline McLeod highlights the barriers her community faces around education. The film delivers a scathing indictment on systemic and urgent issues brought on by these social injustices through the use of home videos and childhood memories.
SPONSORED BY:
Website | Facebook | Instagram
Community based nonprofit promoting positive race relations. Promoting and protecting human rights and diversity in Peterborough.
Our members, both indigenous and non-indigenous, learn together. We do our best to become an example of what reconciliation looks like: people working together and treating each other with respect, justice and equality.
- Year2019
- Runtime11 minutes
- CountryCanada
- DirectorCharlene Moore
- ScreenwriterCharlene Moore
- ProducerCharlene Moore