NFB Collection
WaaPaKe (Tomorrow)
20231 h 20 min 21 secFilm: Documentary
Direction: Jules Arita Koostachin
Production: Teri Snelgrove (National Film Board of Canada)Shirley Vercruysse (National Film Board of Canada)
Script: Jules Arita Koostachin
A National Film Board of Canada production.
Dr. Jules Arita Koostachin’s deeply personal documentary WaaPaKe (Tomorrow) asks the difficult question: “Who are we without our pain?”
For generations, the suffering of residential school Survivors has radiated outward, impacting Indigenous families and communities. Children, parents and grandparents have contended with the unspoken trauma, manifested in the lingering effects of colonialism: addiction, emotional abuse and broken relationships.
In her efforts to help the children of Survivors, including herself and her family, Koostachin makes the difficult decision to step in front of the camera and participate in the circle of truth. She is joined in this courageous act of solidarity by members of her own family, as well as an array of voices from Indigenous communities across Turtle Island. Each person’s individual journey is different, but in sharing their experiences, ways to create space, heal from chaos and forge new paths forward are explored.
Employing a range of innovative cinematic means, including collage, soundscapes and set design, the documentary illustrates not only the complex and deep-seated emotional undercurrents at work but also the layered stories of the people, embedded in the land itself. In learning how to actively demonstrate love and break the cycle of abuse, Indigenous ways of being, as well as creativity, play an enormous role—whether it’s filmmaking, poetry or learning to hunt in the Ancestral way.
Moving beyond burying intergenerational trauma, WaaPaKe (Tomorrow) is an invitation to unravel the tangled threads of silence and unite in collective freedom and power.
Availability
Other versions
Subject categories
- Indigenous Peoples in Canada (First Nations and Métis) > ChildrenCultural IdentityResidential Schools
- Social Issues > Identity and Survival
- Psychology and Psychiatry > Portraits
- Law and Crime > Violence Directed at Children
- Family Studies/Home Economics > Family Diversity and Challenges
- Indigenous Studies > Issues and Contemporary Challenges
- Arts Education > Visual Arts
- Indigenous Peoples: Canada > CreeStó:lo Tlingit
- Education > Residential Schools History, Personal Accounts, Experience Residential Schools Trauma & Healing
Credits
- writer
- Jules Arita Koostachin
- director
- Jules Arita Koostachin
- producer
- Teri Snelgrove
- line production
- Jennifer Roworth
- director of photography
- Michael Bourquin
- editor
- Jessica Dymond
- composer
- Justin Delorme
- featuring
- Rita Okimawinninew
- Asivak Koostachin
- Joseph Dandurand
- Maisie Smith
- Jules Arita Koostachin
- Pawaken Koostachin-Chakasim
- Tapwewin Koostachin-Chakasim
- Mahiigan Koostachin
- Connor Nichol
- Lynn Power
- production manager
- Angie Nolan
- sound recordist
- Ramsay Bourquin
- Kaitlyn Redcrow
- additional photography
- Cameron Watts
- Asivak Koostachin
- camera operator
- Cameron Watts
- grip
- Joey Aleck
- production designer
- Yolonda Skelton
- title designer
- James Monkman
- motion graphics designer
- James Monkman
- key hair
- Sheleah Bradley
- Courtney Yellow-Quill
- makeup artist
- Sheleah Bradley
- Courtney Yellow-Quill
- production coordinator
- Nathan Conchie
- Jas Calcitas
- Maddy Chang
- production assistant
- Alexandra Knowles
- Sarah Kelley
- Mike Nichols
- Richard Wilson
- Bárbara Rafaela Guimaraes Costa
- indigenous registered clinical counsellor
- Lynn Power
- researcher
- Erika MacPherson
- Angie Nolan
- sound designer
- Humberto Corte
- re-recording mixer
- Isabelle Lussier
- dialogue editor
- Andrea Velarde Mosquera
- background editor
- James Neves
- colourist
- Serge Verreault
- graphic artist
- Bun Lee
- technical coordinator
- Wes Machnikowski
- marketing manager
- Kay Rondonneau
- publicist
- Katja De Bock
- studio administrator
- Carla Jones
- executive producer
- Shirley Vercruysse
Awards
- Best BC FilmInternational Film Festival
- Native Viewpoint Award - Indigenous Film Critic's Best Overall SelectionIndie Awards
- Cantin Jury Award for Community ImpactJunction North International Documentary Film Festival
- Best Canadian FeatureJunction North International Documentary Film Festival
- Best Northern Ontario film (tied with Dear Friend: Where Have You Gone?)Junction North International Documentary Film Festival