When sleeping women wake, mountains move: #IdleNoMore

December 28, 2012
As a Canadian who believes in democracy, I am beyond frustrated by Harper and his cronies running rough shod over our political system. When you have a majority government, you have a responsibility to govern for ALL of the people, not just the constituents who voted for you. But Harper's Conservatives apparently feel no such responsibility. As Elizabeth May said, "No previous Privy Council in the history of this country has ever equated an amendment to a bill between first reading and royal assent as some sort of political defeat that must be avoided at all costs. This is a level of parliamentary partisanship that takes leave of its senses."

As an environmentalist who has been fighting to protect the earth since my first “Save The Whales” campaign when I was 8 years old, I believe that the legally binding treaty rights of Canada’s First Nations are the only thing standing between Harper and his plans to destroy this planet.

As a proud Métis whose family signed Treaty 4 and was then discharged from Treaty for their participation in the Riel Resistance, I don’t want to see anyone else lose their rights to their land, thereby destroying their way of life and disconnecting them from their culture.

As an artist whose films address issues of social justice in an attempt to shift perspectives and create dialogue, I think the Idle No More movement is a vitally important shift in the dialogue on Indigenous issues in this country and around the world.  

As a woman, I believe the Chinese proverb “When sleeping women wake, mountains move.” The work that I do, creating films to draw attention to issues of violence against women, is meant to empower women to stand up for themselves and others. So for anyone who doesn’t think that Idle No More is also about the 600 missing and murdered Aboriginal women known as the Stolen Sisters, think again. Our women are vital to healthy communities. Our nation is strong only when our women are strong. And between Chief Theresa Spence and the four women who started Idle No More (Sheelah McLean, Nina Wilson, Sylvia McAdam & Jessica Gordon) our nation is strong indeed.

Here is the one-minute film I created as part of the imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival’s Stolen Sisters Digital Initiative. I plan on expanding this film and submitting it to festivals later this year, but wanted to share it with the world during this time of Idle No More:
 

Remember...

December 6, 2012
Remembering Geneviève Bergeron, Hélène Colgan, Nathalie Croteau, Barbara Daigneault, Anne-Marie Edward, Maud Haviernick, Barbara Klucznik-Widajewicz, Maryse Laganière, Maryse Leclair, Anne-Marie Lemay, Sonia Pelletier, Michèle Richard, Annie St-Arneault and Annie Turcotte. Remembering all of our Stolen Sisters. Thinking of all of the women still at risk. Working towards a world without violence...  

 

Cara goes to imagineNATIVE

October 18, 2012
Okay, so I meant to post something much earlier about this, rather than waiting until the day after the festival started, but here's what I'm up to at the imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival

 

Wednesday, October 17: Pitch workshop from 9am-5pm 

Friday, October 19:
Watch me pitch


Drama Queen! Pitch Competition at 11:30am (open to the public):
 http://imaginenative.org/festival2012/node/1996

Saturday, October 20:
Two films and a panel

10:30am My film "When It Rains," part of the Stolen Sisters Digital Initiative (see below), is screening in Alternative New Media On Screen: http://imaginenative.org/festival2012/alternativenewmediaonscreen_program2012

1pm Panel: Alternative Audiences and Interactive Storytelling: Infusing Indigenous Art and Issues into the Public Consciousness: http://imaginenative.org/festival2012/node/1998 (Stolen Sisters filmmakers Lisa Jackson and I are on the panel but not listed on the website yet)
 
5pm: My film "The Pomegranate" is screening in Mothers & Daughters Shorts Program: http://imaginenative.org/festival2012/mothersanddaughtersshorts_program2012

Sunday, October 21: Closing night

Link to the Stolen Sisters Digital Initiative website: http://imaginenative.org/festival2012/SSDI

"When It Rains" will also be available on TTC screens for viewing starting October 15th, and on screens at malls and airports across the country (listed in full on the website), including but not limited to:

Calgary: Southcentre Mall, Sundridge Mall, Airport
Edmonton: Mill Woods Town Centre, Southgate Centre
Toronto: Dundee Place, Holt Renfrew Centre, Metro Hall, Richmond Adelaide Place, Yorkdale Shopping Centre
Scarborough: Scarborough Town Centre
Victoria: Mayfair Shopping Centre
 
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