Voyage en mémoires indiennes

  • USA One of many

Inhalte(1)

Sally Tisiga was four years old when she was taken away from her mother and handed over to a foster family. It was thirty years later that she saw her again. Sally was born in the Lower Post reservation in Yukon, Canada, to a Native Canadian family. Though she seems like any average modern young woman, Sally has never forgotten her heritage. In 1992 she takes her two adolescents sons to the Yukon on a search for the past she was forced to leave behind. The trip takes them across the West of the country, from urban areas of large cities to wild solitary places in the Canadian Rockies, through huge windswept plains. She revisits places and meets people who awaken forgotten memories. Sally’s story is shared by several generations of Native American children who were the victims of a government practice of taking them away from their families and communities. To kill the Indian nature of the child was the aim of this policy of assimilation that was adopted by the Canadian government, after realizing that adults would not simply conform to white civilisation’s standards. The result is the continuous erosion of the Native Canadian society by a blind bureaucracy that wrenched thousands of children from their culture and left them, lost in a society where they have no place. (DOK.fest München)

(mehr)