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Falstaff Family Centre
35 Waterloo Street North, Stratford, ON, N5A 5H6

The Falstaff Family Centre (FFC) in collaboration with Kaswentha Two Row Now, will be hosting two screenings of WaaPaKe (Tomorrow) in honour of The National Day for Truth and Reconciliation on September 30th. This and their other events are intended to help foster learning, awareness, inclusivity, as well as an understanding of the impact of colonialism, including the legacy of residential schools. 

WaaPake (Tomorrow) – directed by Jules Arita Koostachin (2023, 80 min) – TO BE SCREENED AT 2:30 and 7:00 pm

In Swampy Cree, the word WaaPaKe means tomorrow—and as Attawapiskat filmmaker Jules Koostachin says in her deeply personal documentary, “Tomorrow means hope. It means that we have a future.”

A powerful film about intergenerational trauma and healing, examined through an Indigenous lens, WaaPaKe reveals the reality of living in the shadow of residential school experiences and explores ways in which we can change the narrative to one that offers hope and a view to the future. The film creates a space for reflection and discussion so that the descendants of residential school survivors may respond to this shared burden of history and confront the cyclical nature of intergenerational trauma in their own lives and beyond.

“…a tender portrait of how we shift from a trauma-centric conversation to one of actionable healing and acceptance within family – with community, land, love and culture. WaaPaKe is a testimony of courage, care and respect.”
—ImagineNATIVE 2023

Watch the trailer: https://vimeo.com/863967679

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Free screening. All are welcome. For more information on all the events that day, please see https://www.falstafffamilycentre.com/truthandreconciliation 

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