Showing posts with label Canadian History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canadian History. Show all posts

02 February 2014

CBC News: 18-year quest brings 1957 film home to N.W.T. Dene

Source:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/18-year-quest-brings-1957-film-home-to-n-w-t-dene-1.2519736

18-year quest brings 1957 film home to N.W.T. Dene

'I saw my uncle,' says Frank Andrew, Grand Chief of the Sahtu Dene Council, after sneak preview

CBC NewsPosted: Feb 01, 2014 10:52 AM CTLast Updated: Feb 02, 2014 6:53 AM CT
  • Tom Andrews first learned that a French anthropologist had visited the Sahtu region of the N.W.T. in the 1950s when he was doing an oral history project in 1995.
  • Tom Andrews first learned that a French anthropologist had visited the Sahtu region of the N.W.T. in the 1950s when he was doing an oral history project in 1995. (Courtesy Tom Andrews)
  • Mountain Dene elders told Andrews about the footage that had been shot, and asked him to find it. (Courtesy Tom Andrews)
  • 'I honestly expected in 1996 I’d have this film under my arm,' Andrews says. It took almost two decades. (Courtesy Tom Andrews)
  • The 25-minute silent film includes footage of people who will be recognized by their grandchildren today. (Courtesy Tom Andrews)
  • 'The fact that there are still people living today who are in the film is what makes it special,' says Andrews. (Courtesy Tom Andrews)
  • Jean Michéa's film includes some intense industrial scenes of the gas wells at Norman Well. 'In fact, as an anthropologist, that’s what he was interested in,' says Andrews. (Courtesy Tom Andrews)
  • But Michéa met an Oblate missionary in Tulita who persuaded him to meet several Mountain Dene families. He traveled with them into the mountains. (Courtesy Tom Andrews)
  • Three screenings of the 25-minute film are scheduled in Tulita, Norman Wells and Yellowknife this month. (Courtesy Tom Andrews)
1 of 8
Close
Anthropologist Tom Andrews speaks to Trail's End 11:29
People in the Northwest Territories will get a chance this week to see some real life historical footage of their Mountain Dene elders.
Three screenings are scheduled for a 25-minute silent film shot in the Sahtu region in 1957 by a French anthropologist.
It’s the first time the film will be viewed publicly in Canada, and it’s thanks to an 18-year quest by territorial archaeologist Tom Andrews.
  • Click the link on the left to hear a full interview with Andrews
Andrews first heard about the film while working on an oral history project at Drum Lake, N.W.T. in 1995.
He was talking with a group of Mountain Dene elders when the conversation turned to a French anthropologist who had visited the area in the 1950s and captured some of the experience on a 16 mm camera.
“They asked me to search for it,” Andrews says. “I honestly expected in 1996 I’d have this film under my arm.”
Instead, it took almost two decades.

Trail runs cold at Farley Mowat

Boating
Jean Michéa came to the North to study the oil and gas industry at Norman Wells, but got sidetracked by an Oblate Missionary who introduced him to the Mountain Dene and a unique way of life. (Courtesy Tom Andrews)
Andrews took advantage of the new innovation of email, which the Northwest Territories government had made available to staff the year before, to reach out to anthropologists who might have clues about the man’s identity.
He soon learned about a French anthropologist named Jean Michéa who had spent time in the Keewatin district of Nunavut shortly after World War Two. Michéa had become friends with Farley Mowat, who was then doing research for what would become Never Cry Wolf.
Mowat confirmed that the two had exchanged Christmas cards for many years afterwards, but the cards stopped abruptly in 1964.
Andrews picked up the trail again in 2007 when a Tulita woman passed his quest on to another anthropologist, Chris Fletcher, then at the University of Alberta, now at Laval University.
Fletcher took up the project with enthusiasm, eventually making contact with a former Laval professor living in Paris who was the missing link. Not only did she know Michéa; he was a former teacher and distant relative.
Andrews and Fletcher drafted a letter in French to pass on to Michéa. Then they waited.
The response was lovely, but haunting.
Jean Michéa had spent much of his life as a professor at the Sorbonne. He was now 95, mostly deaf and living in Paris. He wrote that he did have some materials from his expedition, but that it was in his summer home in southeast France, which he did not plan to visit until May. “I hope I last long enough to get to it,” he wrote.
So did Andrews.

The DVD arrives in Canada

Andrews got the call on Christmas Eve. Fletcher had received a DVD from France in the mail.
“I have to say, it was quite moving,” Andrews says about first seeing the footage. “To have spent 18 years looking for this film and then to actually see it, it’s truly remarkable.”
'The fact that there are still people living today who are in the film is what makes it special.'- Tom Andrews, anthropologist
The film is a 25-minute documentary.
The first half shows the fledgling city of Yellowknife, including local landmarks and residential streets.
“All the houses had vegetable gardens,” Andrews says. “I’m sure it must have been more difficult to get vegetables in Yellowknife in those days. There was no highway then, of course.”
Next are some intense industrial scenes of the gas wells at Norman Well. “In fact, as an anthropologist, that’s what he was interested in. He was actually coming to Norman Wells to see that and to study that.”
But Michéa’s journey didn’t go as planned. While in Tulita, he met an Oblate missionary, who persuaded him to meet the Mountain Dene and see their mooseskin boats.
Michéa agreed, and wound up documenting a journey into the mountains with several Shúhtagot'ine families, including people who are still alive today.

Screenings in Tulita, Norman Wells, Yellowknife

“I saw my uncle,” says Frank Andrew, Grand Chief of the Sahtu Dene Council, who grew up in Tulita and got a sneak preview of the film. “It was wonderful to see what our elders were actually doing back then. Everything was done just by traveling on the land.”
'I saw my uncle.'- Chief Frank Andrew
The film offers a rare example of traditional life at the time.
“For the young people today it’ll probably mean that our elders meant what they talk about,” Andrew says.
Andrews, the archaeologist, says he’s pleased that the film wasn’t shot in the 1910s or 1920s.
“The fact that there are still people living today who are in the film are what makes it special,” he says. “It’s almost like home movies for the people in Tulita.”
Screenings are scheduled for Tulita on Monday, in Norman Wells on Wednesday and in Yellowknife of Feb. 19 at the Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre.
Along with the film, Michéa also took many photographs, which Andrews is still gathering.
“There’s still more to come and we’re excited about that as well.”

Corrections

  • The original version of this story incorrectly identified Tom Andrews. He is the territorial archaeologist.
    Feb 02, 2014 6:53 AM CT

30 January 2014

CBC.CA: Black History Month stamp celebrates Vancouver's Hogan's Alley

Source: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/black-history-month-stamp-celebrates-vancouver-s-hogan-s-alley-1.2516741


Black History Month stamp celebrates Vancouver's Hogan's Alley

Nora Hendrix, grandmother of Jimi, and Fielding Spotts, Western Canada's first Baptist, featured

CBC NewsPosted: Jan 30, 2014 6:28 AM PTLast Updated: Jan 30, 2014 10:00 AM PT
Close

Hogan's Alley stamp 1:29

Related Stories
Hogan's Alley Black History Month stamp
Canada Post describes Hogan's Alley as a "vibrant destination for food and jazz through the 1960s." It explains that Hogan's Alley was the unofficial name of a four-block long dirt lane that formed the nucleus of Vancouver's first concentrated African-Canadian community. (Canada Post)
Hogan's Alley in Vancouver is one of two historic Canadian neighbourhoods with significant links to black history that is being recognized this year by Canada Post for Black History Month.
Along with Africville in Halifax, Hogan's Alley was a small but vibrant community that was dismantled in the 1960s to make way for new construction.
The area, close to where Vancouver's Chinatown currently exists, was home to the city's first concentrated black community.
Two of its most prominent residents — Fielding William Spotts Jr., a cooper by trade and the first Baptist in Western Canada, and Nora Hendrix, grandmother to rock legend Jimi Hendrix and cook at Vie's Chicken and Steak House — are featured on the stamp.
Wayde Compton, a local writer and poet, said the significance of the commemorative stamp is substantial.
"I grew up without these kinds of things," he said. "Knowing that something like this exists, and knowing that generations that are coming up now are going to have this as part of the regular landscape is very satisfying."
Canada Post has begun issuing the stamps today.
Africville Black History Month stamp
Canada Post's stamp commemorating Halifax's Africville features seven young girls, all members of the community, set against an illustrated background of the neighbourhood's hills and homes. (Canada Post)