Finding Dawn

Finding Dawn is a 2006 documentary film by Métis filmmaker Christine Welsh looking into the fate of an estimated 500 Canadian Aboriginal women who have been murdered or have gone missing over the past 30 years.[1]

Finding Dawn
Directed byChristine Welsh
Production
company
Distributed byNational Film Board of Canada
Women Make Movies
Release date
2006
Running time
73 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

Subject

The film begins with the story of Dawn Crey: one of 60 women, a third of them Aboriginal, who have disappeared from Vancouver's Downtown Eastside over a 20-year period. Crey's remains were among those found on the property of British Columbia serial killer Robert Pickton.[2][3] However, not enough of Dawn's DNA was found to list her as one of the murder victims at the trial. The film introduces viewers to Dawn's sister and brother, and their involvement in the annual Women's Memorial March in Vancouver.[4]

The film then focuses on BC's Highway 16, known as the Highway of Tears, which runs between Prince Rupert, British Columbia and Prince George, British Columbia, looking at the fate of Ramona Wilson.[4] Wilson was one of nine women – all but one of them Native – who have gone missing or been murdered on that stretch of road since the 1990s.

Welsh also filmed in Saskatoon, where a woman named Daleen Kay Bosse disappeared in 2004. She went missing in May but a criminal investigation didn't begin until the following January.[2] In the film, Daleen’s parents and friends talk about their difficulty in getting Saskatoon police to take Daleen’s disappearance seriously.[4]

Native rights activists Janice Acoose and Fay Blaney are interviewed in the film.[2]

Christine Welsh has produced, written and directed films for more than 30 years. She is an associate professor at the University of Victoria, where she teaches courses in indigenous women’s studies and indigenous cinema.[1]

Impact

Finding Dawn is referenced in the later 2015 documentary Highway of Tears, which notes its impact on native viewers.[5]

gollark: What if you devise some ridiculously convoluted scheme where the person in the university doesn't even know you're cheating for them?
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Or, well, it can, CC:T has the `utf8` library.
gollark: Of course, CC cannot represent this.
gollark: Ā is codepoint 256, if you must know.

See also

References

  1. "Acclaimed Feminist Filmmaker To Screen "Finding Dawn"". Center for the Study of Women in Society. University of Oregon. Archived from the original on 8 May 2009. Retrieved 26 November 2009.
  2. O'CONNOR, JENNIFER (Winter 2009). "FINDING DAWN". Herizons. Bnet.
  3. "Métis filmmaker Christine Welsh can be proud of her showing at the Amnesty International Film Festival". Georgia Straight. November 9, 2006. Retrieved 26 November 2009.
  4. de Vos, Gail (January 11, 2008). "FINDING DAWN". Canadian Materials. Manitoba Library Association. XIV (10).
  5. Matthew Smiley (Director) (March 6, 2015). Highway of Tears (Motion picture).
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