| In 1998, the
Canadian Government acknowledged its responsibility for the ill treatment suffered by
children in Autochthon residential schools and consecrated 350 million dollars to finance
community healing efforts. Healing
Words, a series of 6 documentaries, shares with us the cruelty experienced
by Quebec Aboriginal peoples and the social, identity and cultural consequences of this
treatment over three generations, as well as, and especially, the projects undertaken to
effect a lasting recovery.
French version : Parole de Guérison

Summary of the 6 episodes
Episode 1: History of the Aboriginal Healing
Foundation
This episode relates the historical facts of acculturation by means of residential schools
and then portrays the Aboriginal Healing Foundation as a beneficiary of Government funding
and initiator of groups formed in view of permitting Aboriginal peoples to revive their
culture. It then introduces us to several of the Foundations projects that will be
the subject of following episodes.
Episode 2: The Anishnabegs and Residential Schools
The Algonquins-Anisnabegs of Abitibi bear witness to the forced acculturation of the
Autochthon nomads by the white man. Victims of yesterday who are leaders in their
community today, have built projects with regard to the family, one of the cultural
pillars most affected by the residential school drama. The film focuses on the healing
project having to do with learning how to become good parents and, in addition, reveals
the cultural shock resulting from the confrontation of differing mentalities.
Episode 3: Philomène and Her Children
One family was torn apart by the separation of the mother from her ten children. The loss
of traditions and the weakening of family ties are the plight of this family and of many
other Canadian Autochthon families. Some children must follow a therapy in order to find
meaning in their lives, whereas the mother still hopes to pass on to them her
peoples traditional heritage.
Episode 4: The Middle Lake
A group of Innu elders of Natashquan were separated from their children when they were
sent to residential schools. The residential school survivors tell us about
the severance from their families. Today, through their healing project, the elders teach
their grandchildren how to live in the woods, thus helping them to become familiar with
their ancestral way of life.
Episode 5: The Sharing Circle
One of the greatest Aboriginal traditions, the Circle of Sharing, takes us to the
core of spoken evidence when participants in a ceremony relate both their joys and sorrows
of living in White society. A couple of residential school victims learn to love each
other after several therapies. Today, they in turn offer traditional therapies. The
films scope reaches also to those who found advantages in residential schooling.
Episode 6 : The Soul of the Drum
The most senior member of La Romaine, a traditional drum player, tells us of the blessed
past when even missionaries spoke Innu. Because of his efforts, and with the support of
many, we discover that the real issue is one of education, which was imposed in French in
their own village. The last generation of surviving, unilingual Innus pass on to us, by
means of the drum, a great mythology resonating in our ears even today. |