NFB Collection
The Last Days of Okak
198523 min 48 secFilm: Documentary
Direction: Anne BudgellNigel Markham
Production: Kent MartinBarry Cowling
Script: Anne Budgell
Only grass-covered ruins remain of the once-thriving town of Okak, an Inuit settlement on the northern Labrador coast. Moravian missionaries evangelized the coast and encouraged the growth of Inuit settlements, but it was also a Moravian ship that brought the deadly Spanish influenza during the world epidemic of 1919. The Inuit of the area were decimated, and Okak was abandoned. Through diaries, old photos and interviews with survivors, this film relates the story of the epidemic, with its accompanying horrors, as well as examining the relations between the natives and the missionairies.
Availability
Other versions
Subject categories
- History - Canada - 1867-1919 > Atlantic RegionIndigenous Peoples
- Religion, Beliefs and Ethics > Christian MissionsHistorical PerspectivesIndigenous Peoples and Christianity
- Health and Medicine > DiseasesIndigenous Peoples
- Indigenous Peoples in Canada (Inuit) > Health and SafetyHistoryIndigenous IssuesLabrador and QuébecLiving in non-Indigenous CommunitiesReligion and Spirituality
Credits
- director
- Anne Budgell
- Nigel Markham
- producer
- Kent Martin
- executive producer
- Barry Cowling
- script
- Anne Budgell
- photography
- Nigel Markham
- editing
- Nigel Markham
- sound
- Jim Rillie
- sound editing
- Eric Emery
- narrator
- Waldo Scharwey
- Fran Williams
Awards
- Award of Excellence for DirectionAtlantic International Film Festival