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Folil Trafün (joining roots) festival

November 8 @ 4:00 pm - 6:00 pm

The second edition of the Folil Trafün (joining roots) festival will channel the power of films, photography and dialogue to exploire themes of Indigenous contested lands and rights of nature. Learn how film and photography can advance the truth, reconciliation, and decolonization process within UBC and other communities.

Date: November 8, 2024 | 4:00 – 6:00 p.m.

Where: St John’s College | Social Lounge | UBC | 2111 Lower Mall

This event is free to attend but space is limited so please register as soon as possible.

REGISTER HERE

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Films

Writing the Land

Kevin Lee Burton
2007 – 7 min

In this short documentary, a xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) elder rediscovers his Native language and traditions in the city of Vancouver, near where the Musqueam people have lived for thousands of years. Writing the Land captures the ever-changing nature of a modern city – the glass and steel towers cut against the sky, grass, trees, and a sudden flash of birds in flight and the enduring power of language to shape perception and create memory.

Karuara, People of the River 

Miguel Araoz Cartagena and Stephanie Boyd
2024 – 55 min version

Karuara, People of the River is a 2024 documentary that delves into the lives and struggles of the Kukama Indigenous people of the Peruvian Amazon. The story follows a courageous Indigenous woman and her community as they confront powerful interests to protect their river and its sacred spirits. Central to the film is a groundbreaking legal battle in which the Kukama people fight for the Marañón River to be recognized as a person with rights, echoing real-world movements advocating for environmental personhood. The film highlights the community’s efforts to preserve both their culture and the natural environment from external threats.

Speakers

Mariluz Canaquiri Muryari (Indigenous activist and film producer)

Mariluz is president of the Kukama Women’s Federation of the Marañón and Samiria Rivers. She has worked tirelessly on campaigns to defend the Amazon’s rivers and indigenous territory for the past 20 years. In 2023 she won an environmental defender award from the Yves Rocher Foundation in France and spoke at the UN conference on water in New York. Karuara, People of the River is her first feature-length film.

Stephanie Boyd (filmmaker and writer)

Stephanie has spent the past 27 years living and working in Peru as a filmmaker and writer. Despite having a severe hearing impairment, she has produced and directed three award-winning feature documentaries: Choropampa, The Price of Gold (2002), Tambogrande, Mangos, Murder, Mining (2008) and The Devil Operation (2010). These films have been screened at more than 100 international festivals, won more than 25 awards and have been broadcast worldwide on stations including the Sundance Channel, Outside TV, CBC Country Canada, Al Jazeera and others. Stephanie was born and raised in Oshawa, Ontario, where she learned about workers’ rights, industrial contamination and the power of social protest.

Robert Kozak (professor and dean at UBC faculty of forestry)

Rob’s teaching and research interests revolve around providing solutions to complex problems related to sustainable development, forestry, wood products and the emerging conservation economy. Under Rob’s leadership, the faculty of forestry has advanced EDI initiatives like the Folil Trafün festival, promoting Indigenous films and dialogue about Indigenous knowledge and stewardship practices.

Details

Date:
November 8
Time:
4:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Event Tags:
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Website:
https://forestry.ubc.ca/folil-trafun-nov-8-2024/

Venue

St John’s College Social Lounge
UBC, 2111 Lower Mall

Organizer

UBC Faculty of Forestry