Gather

Bud Watch Party: Gather

Friday, November 20, 2020 - 12:00am
Saturday, November 21, 2020 - 12:00am
Sunday, November 22, 2020 - 12:00am
Monday, November 23, 2020 - 12:00am
Tuesday, November 24, 2020 - 12:00am
Wednesday, November 25, 2020 - 12:00am
Thursday, November 26, 2020 - 12:00am
Friday, November 27, 2020 - 12:00am
Saturday, November 28, 2020 - 12:00am
Sunday, November 29, 2020 - 12:00am
Monday, November 30, 2020 - 12:00am
  • Virtual Event -- Access Info Below
New York Times Critic's Pick! A new film about reclaiming ancestral food systems, screening in honor of Native American Heritage Month

How to watch the film

Click on the button link above to screen the film at home. You must enter the password Gather2020 for access. It is case sensitive.

About the film

James Beard Award winning filmmaker Sanjay Rawal offers an intimate portrait of a growing movement. Indigenous Americans are reclaiming their spiritual and cultural identities through obtaining sovereignty over their ancestral food systems, while battling against the historical trauma brought on by centuries of genocide. An indigenous chef embarks on an ambitious project to reclaim ancient food ways on the Apache reservation. In South Dakota, a gifted Lakota high school student, raised on a buffalo ranch, is proving her tribes native wisdom through her passion for science. And a group of young men of the Yurok tribe in Northern California are struggling to keep their culture alive and rehabilitate the habitat of their sacred salmon. All these stories combine to show how reclaiming and recovery of ancient food ways is a way forward for Native Americans to bring back health and vitality to their people.

Centuries before native North Americans encountered Christopher Columbus lost at sea, tens of thousands of miles from his destination, indigenous peoples lived in harmony with the land, cultivating and maintaining a thriving food system across the entire Western Hemisphere. In the early 1600s Europeans marked a push to settle the Americas. Unable to best Natives through weaponry alone, Americans took to asymmetrical tactics – killing women and children, inducing famine and demoralizing warriors. The most effective of these tactics was the annihilation of food systems. This attempt at extermination motivated not only military policy but social and political policy. It is by design that Indian Country remains food insecure – dependent on the same ration system enacted to settle Natives adjacent to Military Forts, freeing their ancestral lands for unabated resource extraction. The west was won by starving Indians and yoking them to government support – a system which endures to this day.

 

Run Time: 

1 hour 24 min.

About Bud's Watch Party

During this time while we're staying safer at home, Bud Werner Memorial Library is organizing special opportunities to share some of the newest documentaries you might have seen in Library Hall. Instead, we're watching them online, virtually together at home. The library hopes that you'll enjoy watching these thoughtful films, then come together for community conversations to share the experience and maybe even put our isolated heads together for some thought-provoking brainstorming and solutions.