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BIOGRAPHY |
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COVER |
Will
Tammy Lynne Light the Seventh Fire?
The next time I meet her, she is more "filmmaker-ish." She
wears a beautiful native design inspired necklace and a long black dress.
She looks me in the eye; she seems to be filled with an otherworldly energy.
When she is quiet, there is nothing particularly striking about her; you
would not look twice if you saw her at a bus stop - or begging change;
yet, when she speaks about her film, Eagle Feather, or about the politics
and social issues that drive it, her plain, too pale face becomes infused
with a life force and beauty. I notice her cheekbones, her Cupid's bow
lips, her dark, tumbling curls. Tammy Lynne tells me about the Aboriginal prophecies and the film she had been writing when social issues pressed in and demanded attention and a film of their own. In this film (the one she had been writing), an Aboriginal girl loses her history. When she goes back to the reservation to find it, she discovers that she carries the key to lighting the 7th fire. I can't help but wonder how close to this character Tammy Lynne feels.
Prophecies, like myths and legends, have their roots in the ordinary.
As well as being a filmmaker, Tammy Lynne is an actor, stunt performer
and activist. I get the impression that she has read a lot, particularly
in Native history and myth. And she is busy. She has a seven-year-old
and a twelve-year-old, whom she continued to raise through her six years
of business and theatre studies, at John Abbott college in Montreal, then
Capilano and UBC here in Vancouver. "Does she know something the rest of us don't know?" I can't help but think when talking to her. So much information, infused with her particular energy and viewpoint, is crammed into our short discussion. She talks quickly, as if to make sure she gets everything in, everything she needs to tell me so that I can tell you, before our time together is through. She may be talking about the past, in the present, but her mind is in the future. She talks a lot about connections, and unity, and food sovereignity,
which to her mind, is the one thing people can all agree on and work together
for. "I think if you can sit there and eat a bowl of food while some is starved right beside you, that you are anti-productive in this world, and that, I think, is the one thing people can agree on. "It creates war; it creates all kinds of things, right? People get desperate and things like that Our communities aren't strong anymore So it's the rebuilding of these communities and bringing people together that's important." I've never thought of filmmaking as a political, or activist tool, but
Tammy Lynne wields her storytelling ability like an army. This reminds
me of something I read about the three seats of power: military, communications
and law. The communications seat is about talking people into believing
what you want them to believe - usually, that they should follow your
orders. Eagle Feather, Tammy tells me, is "an Aboriginal historical documentation of unheard contemporary and historical accounts aimed to encourage the rising and healing of our people - rippling on to reach us all. It starts from the beginning of human life on through today, and will carry a visual representation of the hope and beauty that lies in the future. "It is inspired by the recent rise in aboriginal children being taken into the care of the government and the need for our First Nation's people's stories to be told. "From 1999 to 2003, there has been an increase of 1000 aboriginal
children taken into the care of the government however there's been a
decrease of 2000 non-aboriginal children," Tammy Lynne tells me.
An advocacy worker who was helping Tammy get Social Assistance (after she finished her scholarship at UBC) pointed out this trend to the filmmaker. They both agreed that this story needed to be told, that Aboriginal people had forgotten how to love each other, hear and support each other, and that their stories, however painful, needed to be told. For Eagle Feather, Tammy will interview women who have lost their children
recently and survivors of the residential school systems. She has already
interviewed protesters from the Woodwards movement and will also include
dialogues with David Suzuki, a big supporter of Native philosophy, and
lawyers such as Rob Gibbens who is working to see "victims of residential
schools acknowledged as citizens under the Canadian Constitution or Prisoners
of War under the Geneva Convention, which distinctly allow for compensation."
With generous help from sources such as the Aboriginal Employment Centre
(who provided a $15,000 grant for the film's development, in exchange
for instruction to Aboriginal youth in filmmaking), the Canada Council
and the CBC, and the collaboration of such Aboriginal talent as mentor/executive
producer Ryan Black, best known as an actor from projects such as Dance
Me Outside, The Rez and North of 60; Midcan, a Native production company
based in Winnipeg, and Meaches, a Native owned special effects company,
also in Winnipeg, Eagle Feather will be completed by late 2005. Will Tammy Lynne light the 7th fire? With Eagle Feather, the process
has already begun. |
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