Indai, Apai, Darah (Mother, Father, Blood)
is thrilled to announce its official selection at the prestigious Mountain Film
Festival, which will be held between May 23 and 27 in Telluride, Colorado. Directed
by Kynan Tegar (Dayak Iban), the film takes place in the Indonesian village of
Sungai Utik, where elders of the Dayak Iban people have been able to repel
extractive companies and protect the surrounding forests. The production is
part of a series of films created by the Wayfinders Circle– a global network of
Indigenous guardians who protect their lands, waters, and territories and are
dedicated to sharing the transformative potential of Indigenous lifeways.
“Indai, Apai, Darah serves as my love letter
to the village that raised not only me but also my father, his father, and
countless generations before. The title itself derives from a cherished quote
by my grandfather: 'The land is our mother, the forest our father, and the
river our blood.' This quote perfectly encapsulates the philosophy that guides
our way of life in Sungai Utik,” says the director, Kynan Tegar, who is a
19-year-old photographer and filmmaker from the Dayak Iban tribe of the island
of Borneo, Kalimantan, Indonesia.
Tegar grew up in and around the
traditional longhouse of his village of Sungai Utik, where he learned directly
from the elders, their wisdom and values, their stories of resistance in the
face of encroaching deforestation, and the threats to their way of life. Picking
up his first camera as an inquisitive twelve-year-old, he discovered the power
of visual storytelling to communicate and change lives.
“Mass deforestation persists despite all
efforts, and the future of the Indigenous Peoples who call these places home
remains uncertain. With this film, I hope to have captured the beauty of their
resilience and to provide the rest of the world with a glimpse into my
perspective – that of a child from this community,” he concludes.
The film is a co-production between the
Wayfinders Circle conveners (Nia Tero, Pawanka Fund, the World Union of
Indigenous Spiritual Practitioners) and the Dayak Iban Sungai Utik. The film is
part of the Indigenous Storytellers Shorts program at Mountainfilm. You can
attend the world premiere in person on May 25th at 9:15 AM. A second screening
will take place on Sunday, May 26th, at 2:45 PM. Tickets can be purchased
online.
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