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Indigenous worldviews, values and sacred places strengthen the earth’s biological and cultural diversity
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  • learn
    • overview
    • blog
    • history timeline
    • teachers guides
    • sacred site reports
    • tools for action
    • slfp archives
    • bibliography
  • portfolio
    • films overview
    • film gallery
    • audio archive
    • photo gallery
    • in distribution: standing on sacred ground
  • take action
    • explore
      native media
    • visit allied organizations
    • buy DVDs
    • join
  • about
    • staff bios
    • testimonials
    • awards
  • search

Film Gallery

View allClips and ScenesEventsExtended InterviewsFull Length FilmsShort DocsTrailers

Standing on Sacred Ground Trailer

Indigenous communities around the world resist threats to their sacred places—the original protected lands—in a growing movement to defend human rights and restore the environment.

47,915 VIEWS
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What Good is an Apology?

Why has the U.S. government failed to offer an apology to Native Americans? Canada and Australia are way ahead—but what good is an apology if actions do not follow?

11,602 VIEWS
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Satish Kumar on “What is a Sacred Place?”

Satish Kumar brings a Hindu, Buddhist and Jain perspective to the definition of “sacred place.” We found his explanation so compelling that we edited a three-minute piece…

20,400 VIEWS
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Indigenous Reflections on Christianity

There’s a story that has has played out all over the world. First come the missionaries doing good. Indigenous communities split apart and connections to land, ancestors and spirits of place weaken—not everywhere, but almost everywhere.

80,833 VIEWS
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Thomas Banyacya speaks in Chaco Canyon

Hopi Messenger-Thomas Banyacya

Hopi elder Thomas Banyacya (1909-1999) was selected as spokesman for traditional leaders in 1948, after atom bombs triggered Hopi awareness that the prophecized “gourd full of ashes” had finally appeared. We worked with Thomas from 1977 through 1999 and were fortunate to film him at Chaco Canyon, in Washington DC, and at sacred migration sites around the Four Corners area. His humor, good spirit and wisdom will be long remembered.

457,160 VIEWS
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Behind the Scenes – Detained in Papua New Guinea

Filming a Chinese-government-owned mine in Papua New Guinea in 2010 led to some hair-raising moments as we were filming “Profit and Loss” when we were detained at gunpoint in a makeshift police station inside a shipping container…

95,449 VIEWS
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The Attack on the West Berkeley Shellmound and Village Site

Lisjan Ohlone leader Corrina Gould and her allies pray at the West Berkeley Shellmound and Village Site every year on the Spring Equinox. This year they went to protect the historic site from a new threat.

915 VIEWS
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West Berkeley Shellmound Action on MLK Day

On Martin Luther King Jr. Day, January 14, 2018, more than 400 people turned out to protect the West Berkeley Shellmound and Historic Ohlone Village Site.

931 VIEWS
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Aloha `Aina – Calling the Rain

As our delegation of 25 sacred site guardians traveled to the IUCN World Conservation Congress in September 2016, our first stop was the island of Maui, where we were welcomed by members of the Protect Kaho`olawe Ohana (PKO).

4,239 VIEWS
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Crystal Power in Chaco Canyon

National Park Service curator Wendy Bustard spent a day with us, displaying an array of New Age offerings and reflecting on why they are considered offensive by native people. Here is a scene we weren’t able to include in the film.

12,891 VIEWS
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