Initialement co-présenté par CAPACOA et Edinburgh Festival Fringe sous l’égide de Spotlight Canada, le programme UNcommon Wealth était une initiative culturelle menée par le Haut Commissariat du Canada au Royaume-Uni, le Conseil des arts du Canada et Patrimoine canadien au début de juillet 2022.
La première partie de The UNcommon Wealth commence avec une création de spoken word d’Alice Eather et une présentation préenregistrée de ShoShana Kish. Ces deux provocations étaient L’APPEL à ceux qui participaient à LA RÉPONSE (conversations), deux événements en direct qui se sont déroulés sur deux jours, et sont destinés à susciter une réflexion plus profonde chez les spectateurs.
Alice Eather et sa famille sont l’une des nombreuses personnes qui sont propriétaires traditionnels de la terre et de la mer dans le pays de West Arnhem Land, N.T., en Australie. La Terre d’Arnhem est une zone sacrée située dans la région la plus septentrionale du Territoire du Nord australien, et abrite la plus ancienne culture vivante de peuples autochtones existant sur la planète aujourd’hui. Ce film capture la beauté de cette terre et de cette eau qui était et continue d’être menacée par l’exploitation minière offshore, la fracturation et l’exploration. Leader de la protection de la terre d’Arnhem, les mots émouvants et puissants d’Alice résonnent et se connectent directement à l’esprit thématique dans le cadre du programme de provocation
ShoShona Kish, lauréate d’un prix JUNO, est une organisatrice de la communauté Anishinaabekwe, productrice, activiste, auteur-compositeur et artiste de tournée primée. ShoShona défie les définitions coloniales, subvertissant constamment toute tentative de la « mettre dans une boîte ». Elle est guidée à la fois par la curiosité, explorant ouvertement des sujets d’actualité, inspirants et souvent inconfortables, traitant la musique comme un appel à l’action.
Biographies
Alice Eather
Trigger warning: the following biography contains content about suicide
Alice Pearl Daiguma Eather (1989 – June 4, 2017) was an Aboriginal Australian slam poet, environmental campaigner and teacher from Maningrida. In 2013 Eather started Protect Arnhem Land, an anti-fracking campaign group against Paltar Petroleum. The group was successful in convincing the Northern Territory government to suspend the application pending agreement with the local population. Further campaigning eventually led to Paltar withdrawing the application in 2016. In 2014 Eather was awarded the Northern Territory Young Achiever's Environment Award for her work in preventing oil exploration of Arnhem Land. Eather contributed poetry to the anthology Growing Up Aboriginal In Australia (2018). She appeared in the ABC television programme The Word: Rise of the Slam Poets. Alice Eather was born in Brisbane to Helen Djimbarrwala Willams and Michael Eather, an artist and gallery-owner with European ancestors who arrived on the Second Fleet. She was raised and educated in Brisbane but moved to Maningrida to become the first Ndjebbana-speaking Aboriginal teacher. She died at age 28 as a result of suicide.
My Story is Your Story is shared with the blessing and permission of Alice Eather's family.
ShoShona Kish
ShoShona Kish is an Anishinaabekwe community organizer, producer, activist, songwriter and JUNO award-winning touring artist. ShoShona was awarded the ‘Spirit of Folk Award’ at the International Folk Awards in Kansas City and was recognized by the Berlin based WOMEX organization for her work internationally with the prestigious ‘Professional Excellence Award’, “for her role in the ongoing revolution of upheaving Indigenous communities and their culture – using the medium of music as an agent of change, to awaken our humanity and help us connect”.
ShoShona leads the multi-award-winning band Digging Roots, with her husband, Raven Kanatakta. Their music breaches categorization, seamlessly blending global and traditional Indigenous sounds with roots, blues and soul. They have brought their unique musical marriage of unvarnished truth and unconditional love to venues and festivals around the world.
Like her music, ShoShona defies colonial definitions, constantly subverting any attempts to put her in a box. She is guided by both curiosity and purpose, openly exploring topical, inspirational and often uncomfortable issues, treating music as a call to action.
ShoShona is a member of the Music Canada Advisory Council as well as the founder of the International Indigenous Music Summit and the music label Ishkōdé Records.
She has been an on-air contributor to CBC Radio’s national arts and culture magazine ‘q’ and was the host of the 2018 Maple Blues Awards and the National Arts Centre’s celebration of Indigenous women in music Anishinaabekwe. As an artist and curator, she has collaborated on a wide range of projects at home and abroad with the likes of Canada’s National Art Centre, Massey Hall, the Women of the World Festival and the Sydney Opera House.
Digging Roots’ highly anticipated new album, “Zhawenim” (meaning unconditional love in Anishinabemowiin) was released in June 2022.