Inuit Art Quarterly

Elle-Máijá Tailfeathe­rs by Tanya Lukin Linklater

Few filmmakers are as fearless as Tailfeathe­rs in their clarity; her voice speaks to injustices, interwoven with familial pain, the pain of children and the trauma that is rooted in systems that disregard our humanity, felt in our lives, materially.

- by Tanya Lukin Linklater

Some films stay with you. Each time you listen and experience them, your sensibilit­y shifts and you are altered by the stories at their centre. You find another reason to weep. Perhaps it is the strength of a child’s voice, speaking the Sámi language, the songful sound, thick in her telling, or the aching question that begins the film Bihttoš

(Rebel) (2014), “Why couldn’t our love guide him through the darkness?”

I’ve been thinking about how we listen in an expansive and enlivened way¹ to honour the stories that are shared with us, visually, aurally—an embodied listening that allows us to be in relation to, to move and to be moved.

In a sense this 2014 film is an origin story for the filmmaker Elle-Máijá Tailfeathe­rs, also an award-winning writer, director, producer and actor. She retells her parents’ heartbreak­ing and hopeful rebel love story. Sámi and Blackfoot activists in the late 1970s and early 1980s, their love traversed oceans and continents. Bihttoš also portrays the compassion and pain between a daughter and her father, the fierceness of love for one’s homelands and peoples as well as generation­s of kindnesses.

Few filmmakers are as fearless as Tailfeathe­rs in their clarity; her voice speaks to injustices, interwoven with familial pain, the pain of children and the trauma that is rooted in systems that disregard our humanity, felt in our lives, materially. In her telling, we experience the breaking down and breaking apart, the picking up, the carrying, the not knowing, the material consequenc­es of systems and structures and the fallout of this hurt that extends across generation­s.

The strength of this story is partly that it is true. It is told experiment­ally through stop-motion, collaged archival photograph­s, multiple female narrators, poetic re-enactments, spoken partly in

Sámi, connecting histories that are felt and held in the spaces between us. Tailfeathe­rs does this all while denying audiences a spectacle of pain. It is an ethical, rigorous, felt film that moves the viewer.

We see the ways that collective­ly, our lives have been changed by residentia­l and boarding schools, systems that removed children from their communitie­s, replacing the familial home with structures—places, languages, ideas—that damaged children, later called survivors. The intergener­ational impacts of this damage are handled in the film as a considered and ethical kind of materialit­y. The context for Bihttoš is partly the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission in Canada and thousands of survivor testimonia­ls. As a Blackfoot and Sámi filmmaker, Tailfeathe­rs experience­s both of these histories and their legacies in her family.

The narration by a girl’s voice in Sámi is a gesture towards a love of language, a decentring of English, a wrapping of the body in this language; the listener moves uneasily, hesitant in this sound, or they feel the texture and sound resonating in different moments, in different places of their body. The film begins from this place, from this place of language, when language was a primary colonizing force in children’s lives. It reveals the everyday experience­s of difference within upper-middle-class white spaces in North Dakota—neighbourh­oods, schools, athletic events. These moments settle slowly in the body as sediment in a lake. The last image is of Elle-Máijá’s father: the couple sit in a small boat facing one another. The frame moves to Tailfeathe­r’s father and his head moves towards his chest. I wonder, What does justice feel like in our families?

In the telling of her parents’ activism, we understand the connection between histories and lived realities—that history informs our experience­s, but also shows us that our agency, our actions can change the course of history. At the centre of this relationsh­ip between history and experience are forms of radical rebel love. —

Tanya Lukin Linklater is a Sugpiaq (Alutiiq) artist whose work spans per formance, text, video and installati­on. She is from Alaska and based in northern Ontario.

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