8th fire [videorecording (DVD)] : Whose land it it anyway? / CBC production.
8th fire is a provocative, high-energy journey through Aboriginal country showing why we need to fix Canada's 500 year old relationship with indigenous people: a relationship mired in colonialism, conflict, and denial. The title of the series "8th fire" comes from the Anishinaabe (Ojibway) prophecy of the Seven fires, with the eighth fire being an era of spiritual illumination.
Whose land is it anyway?: There's no getting around it. Land is the biggest sticking point in the relationship between Aboriginal peoples in Canada and the "settler" population. Who owns it, benefits from it, gets to say when, if and how it gets developed? These questions are all the more crucial because the lands in dispute sit on a treasure-trove of resources, which the world is eager to buy from Canada. But don't despair. This episode ... explores the creative ways of working this out. --container.
Record details
- Physical Description: 1 videodisc (45 min.) ; sd., col. ; 4 3/4 in.
- Publisher: Toronto : CBC Documentary Unit : c2012.
Content descriptions
General Note: | Orginally broadcast on the television program Doc Zone (debuted January 12, 2012). |
Formatted Contents Note: | DVD 3 : episode 3. Whose land is it anyway? / directed by Michel Philibert |
Creation/Production Credits Note: | Series producer: Kelly Crichton ; executive producers: Sue Dando, Peter John Ingles ; music composed by: Cris Derkson. |
Participant or Performer Note: | Presenter: Wab Kinew. |
System Details Note: | DVD format ; Dolby Digital 2. |
Terms Governing Use and Reproduction Note: | Restrictions: Camosun employees and students only. |
Language Note: | Closed captioned. |
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