The Experimental Eskimos
Running Time: 69 mins
Year: 2009
synopsis
In the early 1960s the Canadian government conducted an experiment in social engineering. Three 12-year-old Inuit boys, Peter Ittinuar, Zebedee Nungak and Eric Tagoona, were sent to live with White families in Ottawa, to be educated in White schools. The consequences for the boys, their families, their identity, and their culture were brushed aside.
The bureaucrats who brought the boys South did not anticipate the outcome of their experiment. The boys grew up to become leaders of their people, and lifelong thorns in the side of the government. The battles they fought and won were instrumental in the establishment of aboriginal rights in Canada, and led to the creation of Nunavut, the world’s largest self-governing aboriginal territory. But it all came at enormous personal cost.
The Experimental Eskimos is the untold story of how an experiment in assimilation, not only changed three boys, but changed a nation.
Directed by Palme d’Or award-winning filmmaker Barry Greenwald and produced by Emmy award-winning Peter Raymont, The Experimental Eskimos features a wealth of forgotten archival footage, family photos and government documents.
Credits
Directed by Barry Greenwald
A co-production of White Pine Pictures & Paunna Productions in association with APTN and CBC Newsworld, with the participation of the Canadian Television Fund, the Rogers Cable Network Fund, the Nunavut Film Development Corporation, The Canadian Film or Video Tax Credit and the Ontario Film & Television Tax Credit
“DIRECTOR BARRY GREENWALD ZOOMS IN ON THE EMOTIONAL CENTRE OF THESE STORIES.”
— NOW Magazine
“STRANGE, COMPELLING AND ALL TOO TRUE.”
— The Globe and Mail
“A GREAT DOCUMENTARY WITH INCREDIBLE CHARACTERS AND AMAZING ARCHIVAL FOOTAGE.”
— Montreal Mirror
AWARDS & RECOGNITION
winner
2010 directors guild of canada award
ALLAN KING AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN A DOCUMENTARY
WINNER
2010 YORKTON FILM FESTIVAL
KATHLEEN SHANNON AWARD