I helped produce a film (Climate Smart Forestry with the Kalispel Indian Tribe) that is part of this event, organized in a partnership between ProPublica, OPB, Confluence, and Ecotrust.
7pm, Thursday, November 9
The Redd on Salmon Street
Four films showcasing the connections between Native peoples, place, and species unique to the Pacific Northwest.
A special evening of film and conversation that highlights the ways Native peoples throughout the Pacific Northwest maintain their relationship to place as well as the plant and animal life that is critical for cultural continuity.
Over the course of four short films and accompanying conversation, attendees will hear perspectives on the connections between forest and water, the struggle to bring lamprey back to their ancestral waterways, and the challenges faced by tribal fishers to continue their way of life on the Columbia.
The Films
Climate Smart Forestry with the Kalispel Indian Tribe
Produced by Ecotrust
People, Lamprey, and Cultural Ecology
Produced by Freshwaters Illustrated
Salmon People: A Native Fishing Family's Fight to Preserve a Way of Life
Produced in partnership by ProPublica and Oregon Public Broadcasting
Salmon's Agreement
Produced by Confluence
The Panel
Moderator:
Kara Briggs (Sauk-Suiattle, Yakama descendent), Vice President of Tribal Lands & Waters Stewardship at Ecotrust
Panelists:
Randy Settler (Yakama), Tribal Fisher
Gabe Sheoships (Cayuse / Walla Walla), Executive Director at Friends of Tryon Creek