The Thetis Island Nature Conservancy and Community Climate Resilience Presents Powerful Reconciliation Film on June 22nd

Date: June 22
Time: 7:00 pm
Location: Forbes Hall
As part of our Nature of Water project, The Thetis Island Nature Conservancy (ThINC) and Community Climate Resilience (CCR) is proud to host a community screening of ‘Snk̛míp Dig Deeper’, a feature-length documentary, that reveals how what started as a simple wetland restoration project led to uncovering the site's true history: an ancient Indigenous village.
Co-directed by Autonomous Sinixt Matriarch Marilyn James and settler conservationist Lorna Visser of the Valhalla Foundation for Ecology, the film documents the transformation of the ecological conservation project into a profound journey of discovery, cultural reconciliation and land-based responsibility.
As the Valhalla Foundation for Ecology worked to rehabilitate the marsh, they discovered it was once the site of a thriving Sinixt village. What followed was an unexpected and challenging collaboration between settler conservationists and Indigenous people. The Sinixt were declared extinct by the Canadian government, but they are in fact very much alive and active in their territory. The film looks at the additional reconciliation challenge posed by the Sinixt people's bureaucratic extinction by the federal government.
Beautifully filmed over six years in Sinixt tmxʷúlaʔxʷ (traditional territory), Snk̛míp Dig Deeper offers a rare look into Indigenous-led protocols, ecological ethics, and the complex work of decolonizing conservation work. The film features a custom-composed film score, stunning scenery, humour, and many touching moments that will connect you to why restoration of the land, and the First People of the land, is so important.
ThINC and CCR invites all community members to attend this powerful event and join a conversation on what it means today to be responsible stewards of the land.
Admission by donation, with a discussion to follow afterward.