The Georgia Straight

Sinixt defy government claim that they don’t exist

- By Charlie Smith

TI point out that this was ethnic cleansing by legislatio­n.

– Filmmaker Ali Kazimi

oronto filmmaker Ali Kazimi has told a story of a B.C. First Nation declared extinct in 1956. A few years later, the Canadian and U.S. government­s signed a treaty leading to the flooding of a significan­t chunk of their traditiona­l territory. But there’s a catch: the Sinixt people are actually still alive in the Arrow Lakes region of B.C. And in Kazimi’s new film, Beyond Extinction: Sinixt Resurgence, they continue to demand recognitio­n, only to be repeatedly denied by the state.

“I point out that this was ethnic cleansing by legislatio­n,” Kazimi tells the Straight by phone. “There’s no other way to describe it.”

Kazimi began making the film in 1995 after being contacted by a friend, Vancouver lawyer Zool Suleman, who told him about a very unusual immigratio­n case. A Sinixt man from his nation’s traditiona­l territory in Washington state, Robert Watt, wanted to travel freely across the border into his First Nation’s traditiona­l territory in the Arrow Lakes region. The Canadian government wanted to deport him.

So Kazimi took his camera on a trip to the Kootenays to learn more.

“Those four days that I spent there were truly life-changing,” Kazimi says. “I was privy to everything, I was privy to internal discussion­s. I was privy to debates. I was privy to the joy and the laughter and the incredible warmth of the elders. I felt so privileged.”

He wasn’t able to raise the necessary funds to complete this film in the 1990s, but the stories remained with him. Kazimi was particular­ly impressed by Sinixt spokespers­on Marilyn James and elder Eva Orr, who each spoke at length on camera about how their people had been erased from existence north of the U.S.-Canada border. In recent years, Kazimi returned to the area for more filming. And this, along with remarkable historical footage and video shot in the B.C. Interior by other filmmakers, shows a side of colonialis­m that few British Columbians are aware of.

In 1872, a U.S. presidenti­al order forcibly amalgamate­d 12 tribes, including the Sinixt, into the “Colville Confederac­y”. Its people live on in a U.S. reservatio­n from the boundary that extends from the internatio­nal border into central Washington state. Even though pit houses document the existence of Sinixt villages in the Arrow Lakes area, the people did not exist in Canada, according to the government. And that drives James’s activism to this day.

“Marilyn is one of the most remarkable people I’ve met, and she has been a source of inspiratio­n for the film from the time I talked to her,” Kazimi says. “I’m inspired by her sheer willpower that drives her. I have seen the enormous price she paid for it.

“She’s taking on the entire state of Canada and…she is being targeted by the state with all of its machinery, from the police to the legal system,” he continues. “But she maintains a kind of steadfast core and centre of who she is, where she belongs, and where her people come from. And what she’s fighting for. It’s very clear to her.”

Beyond Extinction: Sinixt Resurgence also exposes how the B.C. treaty process pits First Nations against one another. By necessity, Kazimi explains, they must make territoria­l claims that are larger than what they will receive. And that leads to inevitable conflicts when there are overlappin­g claims.

“That’s built into the process,” Kazimi insists. “It’s completely baked in.”

To him, it’s all so familiar. When he was growing up in Delhi, India, students were taught in school how the British colonial power used to use divide-and-conquer methodolog­y against the Indian independen­ce movement. The effect in B.C., he adds, is to weaken the collective response to the state’s efforts to subjugate First Nations.

“It is about pitting one group against another,” Kazimi says. “And then how do you engage in reconcilia­tion when that parallel process is going on?”

He says that some First Nations are challengin­g this effort to drive wedges between them. As an example, he notes that the Okanagan bands are forming alliances. But the problem, Kazimi adds, is that they were given such tiny reserves under the Indian Act, which he also reveals in his film.

“It’s all about the land and it’s all about claims and a recognitio­n of traditiona­l territory,” he says. “For example, in the Sinixt, it’s reduced to a tiny dot of barely a few hundred acres of completely uncultivab­le land. That says something, visually.

“And also, over the years, I’ve realized that most Canadians are completely unaware of what the Indian Act does and how it operates—and how it’s such an instrument, as Indigenous scholars have pointed out, of forced assimilati­on.”

The DOXA Documentar­y Film Festival presents the world premiere of Beyond Extinction: Sinixt Resurgence at 2 p.m. on Saturday (May 7) at the Vancity Theatre and at 4 p.m. on Monday (May 9) at the Djavad Mowafaghia­n Cinema in the Goldcorp Centre for the Arts at SFU. The film is also available online through the DOXA website.

 ?? Photo by Louis Bockner. ?? Filmmaker Ali Kazimi says that he’s been inspired by Sinixt elder Marilyn James’s refusal to give into government claims that her people don’t exist north of the 49th parallel.
Photo by Louis Bockner. Filmmaker Ali Kazimi says that he’s been inspired by Sinixt elder Marilyn James’s refusal to give into government claims that her people don’t exist north of the 49th parallel.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada