B.C. chief wants Oscar-nominated residential school film to be part of curriculum
WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. — An Oscar-nominated documentary about deaths, abuse and missing children at a former British Columbia residential school should be shown in schools across Canada, says a First Nations leader.
The film “Sugarcane,” directed by Secwépemc artist Julian Brave NoiseCat from Williams Lake in the B.C. Interior, and Toronto journalist Emily Kassie, received an Academy Award nomination this week for best documentary feature.
Williams Lake First Nation Chief Willie Sellars, whose nation encompasses the Sugar Cane Reserve and the former St. Joseph’s Mission Residential school said the nomination stirred conflicting emotions of joy, trauma, and validation among members of his community.
“We are really so proud,” Sellars said. “We really can’t believe it. The journey of ‘Sugarcane’ has been an emotional one on many fronts. The film has become so much bigger than all of us. It’s helping us tell the story and really be a part of the healing journey we are on.”