Words of Indigenous Media Artist and Performer Donald Morin, Residing on Turtle Island near other humans, animals, and birds.
Thursday, February 02, 2006
The RightTo Blasphemy (Published in Globe & Mail)
No doubt Earth's Creator has a sense of humour, but not to the point of making fun of the Great Mystery of life and the prophets who came after the creation of this world. Christianity and Islam may be two different angels, but let's not rub mud in the face of what we don't know, but only hear about through images and the written word.
Alberta's Cheques and skeletons in the closet
Friday, January 06, 2006
Métis Leaders say vote Liberal
Due to the possibility , that the article may not be posted due to many reasons, here it is!
With respect to the National Métis group’s statement, I disagree with their political positioning. With the current election promises, polls, discussions, debates, and grandstanding, we as a people must do what is best for everyone, particularly for the most dispossessed people of our country, We must go beyond regional politics, race politics, historical politics, Métis politics and utilize this current opportunity to create real social, economic, cultural, and political change in this country.
The current Status quo only capitulates dominant society into the on-going destruction from capitalist expansionism, and the under-mindment of cultural and socially conscious groups who want a better world for the following generations. Am I an NDPer, Green partier? No, I am with the Creator, nothing more, and nothing less. Economic marginalization through lobbyists, political persuasion, grant and loan payoffs only will create economic divisions between the people who strive to obtain and define there material and capitalist worth. Are we to emulate what we desire materially or spiritually? I find I enjoy life more when I am content with a roof over my head, food in the fridge, and the love of others, than what popular culture pushes in our faces in the media, and educational and cultural apparatuses of this world system.
Be grateful for our breath, our life, and what we should strive to be, instead of what others want us to be. Miigweech, all my relations
Original article may be seen at http://www.cbc.ca/story/canadavotes2006/national/2006/01/06/elxn-metis-liberals.html
Sunday, November 20, 2005
Comments about the "4 billion to Battle Native Poverty".
(Gentleman's reply)
joseph Campbell from Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada writes: Donald Morin: What have you personally done for your peoplethat the white race hasn't. Perhaps most of us are not"racists" as you infer but "realists". You should be gladthat the French and British came to this country instead of the Chineseor even the Russians who were right next door in Alaska. Ican assure you, there would few of your people left if any, and yourancestors would not be called "First Nations". So perhapsthose of you who have the rescources should go to your own whereverthey are and do more for them.
Posted Nov. 19, 2005 at 9:31 PM
My un-edited reply:
Mr Campbell, I believe in my own life, I have done much to help some of Canada’s First People. As a role model, as a teacher, and as a caring individual who is not afraid to pick up my Elders out of their own excrement, when the Euro-centric ambulance, fire, and police personnel are putting on his latex gloves." I have stopped Native young thugs from beating and killing a Non-Native man, because a person should be willing to give up their own life if someone is being attacked and beat by bad people. I have taught aboriginal artists to work four times as hard as the euro-centric and person of colour individuals to embrace life and realize ones potential instead of settling with life. I have walked in the moccasins of our most dispossessd aboriginal souls to know what is killing our people yesterday and today. When I wrote, "genocide has changed its tools of persuasion" in a song in 2002, it was about the subtle tools, the powerful invisible leaders of this earth use to slowly kill off a people, or any sense of hope or potential. I will continue to write and fight against defeatists and colonial mind setters like you, who only want to agitate the other" and spout off your sense of euro-centric and imperialistic superiority. A non-native Scottish friend stated in my film "7 Fires 4 U...Kitchi Manitou they were more racist than the English when it came to their land grab mentality when they first arrived to this country. To imply that The Russians and Chinese are worse than the French or the English is your false sense of superiority and righteousness. So go and re-teach your self and get out of the rut that you have positioned yourself in. As far as what the "white race hasn't" done, Their leaders haven't keep their word, they were bigots, and imperialists who gave diseased blankets to Canada’s First People, stole our land, hung our leaders and abused our women. The white leaders did everything in their power, mind and body to undermine "the people" of this continent and you should be ashamed for writing and implying your sense of reasoning in your reply to me, because it is simplistic, colonial and a result of what was taught to you as a baby, a child, a young man, and the person you are today.
Edited reply sent to Globe and Mail approx 1:10 pm PST:
Mr Campbell, I have done much to help as a role model, teacher, father and as a individual who picked up my Elders out of their own excrement, when the ambulance, fire, and police personnel are putting on his latex gloves." I have stopped Natives from beating and killing a Non-Native man, because it was the right. I taught aboriginal artists to realize ones potential instead of settling with life. I have walked in the moccasins of our most dispossessd to know what is killing our people yesterday and today. When I wrote, "genocide has changed its tools of persuasion" in a song, it was about the subtle tools, the powerful use to slowly kill off a people. I will continue to write and fight against colonial mind setters, who only want to spout off their sense of superiority. A Scottish friend stated in my film "7 Fires 4 U...Kitchi Manitou they were more racist than the English when it came to their land grab when they first arrived here. To imply that The Russians and Chinese are worse than the French or the English is your false sense of superiority and righteousness. As far as what the "white race hasn't" done, their leaders haven't keep their word, were bigots, who gave diseased blankets to 'the Indians", stole our land, hung our leaders and abused our women. The white leaders did everything in their power, mind and body to undermine "the people" of this continent and you should be ashamed for implying your sense of reasoning. It is simplistic, colonial and a result of what was taught to you as a baby, a child, a young man, and the person you are today.
I published these comments to expose the systemic thinking of our times.
In closing, I am posting what I sent yesterday regarding editing, the comments regarding this G & M article and evaluations of the other and the dominent.
Article sent Saturday to The Globe & Mail regarding the comments pertaining to the "4 billion to battle native poverty".
Again, the pathetic do-gooders and naysayers battle it out to what should be done to help, deny and sooth The "Indian Problem" of Canada. I appreciate the sympathetic words, but turn your words to action not platitudes. Vote and work to change the status quo, instead of polarizing words which ends up as nothing abstract or concrete.Diggleworth airhead is no doubt the most pathetic racist who complains about the haves and have-nots of Canadian Society. It's the euro-centric governing system and positioning which continued the "taxation of people in western civilization, and if you are so angry about taxation, take your anger out on the historicity of Western civility, the grandeur and moumentalization of politics in stone and your cities, of which the European ancestors, and North American governments perpetuated to maintain the status quo. Systemic race positioning is in everything from the intellect, the emotional, the material, and sexual politics. To close my view, why does Mr. Gerald McIvor allowed 349 words for his commentary and I have to edit my words down to 190? The literacy of race, capitalism and class defines who and what is allowed to comment, review, and criticize the status quo but NDNs are always allowed less than the Euro-centric other. In closing it does not matter to me how many words we are allowed to share, but what words we utilize to “change the diapers of the ruling class.
End of Globe & Mail postings!!!!
Additonal comments published in Globe and Mail pertaining to article belows
"Divisions plague Assembly of First Nations [/]Dissident chiefs create tension on eve of key meeting with Prime Minister" By BILL CURRY Tuesday, October 25, 2005
Additonal comments published in Globe and Mail
Having met Mr. Fontaine in the past, I saw him as a cordial man, and willing to listen to the communities, he visited. We should not forget the schisms between traditionalists, and Indian Affairs regulated band councils, and remember that tribal custom usage and one nations language, which defined a nation's relations to the land. Since contact, when the imperialist leaders and governments eradicated the "Indian Problem, and took away our ancestor's language, land and customs, that was the beginning of the end of a people. The governments of the day’s intention were to divide us, and undermine our leaders and our first nations tribes. Today is no different
Today, the divide and conquer mentality has replaced our connection to the land and connected us to the black heart of the system. As long as, we appease the white man and his/her system, we will always be seen as a conquered and divided people.
The "Indian Problem" still exists, and no one leader of any government will resolve the indifference we all carry within each of us. We will all remain divided till, we find a leader who will stand up against the capitalist system, and connect all of Mother Earth back to he land. We are of one planet, one earth, one land, one water; too bad nations see life differently.
Donald MorinFilmmaker/Actor/Teacher
Thursday, July 14, 2005
Comment on propaganda news story about Police taking Native "militants down on Burrard Bridge in Vancouver, 2005 & info on I.O.U. LAND MUSICAL
It is ironic just before Canada Day to find myself staring at the front page of the Vancouver Sun and reading the article about police taking down my first nations colleagues on Burrard Bridge. I can completely understand the position, my colleagues took to assert our political position in Canada. I begin a project 15 years ago to create a politically charged film now titled "7 Fires 4 U...Kitchi Manitou. The film utilizes the 1990 Oka crisis as the starting point to examines the dichotomy between societal surveillance and indigenous resistance in an age of Terror, which began for us 513 years ago.
I wanted to paint a picture where two characters affected by the Oka crisis begin their journey in promoting indigenous resistance , and any means to fight the racism, the terrorization of aboriginal people, and to stand up against the media propaganda utilized to devalue our people on the Canandian landscape. So it is no surprise to still see the propaganda utilized by Canada's police to undermine the political actions of Canada's first people. In this Age of Terror, I have utilized my experience to expose the propaganda that is use to contain the indigenous sovereignty of our native people. For the SUN to utilize an image which has nothing to do with the actual taken down of the native people on the Burrard bridge, but instead uses a file picture to paints us as terrorists and thugs, shows what the police, INSET, and media appartusses will do to manufacturing consent in criminalizing our political actions. Shame on Canada.
This commentary does not represent the views of my current working relationship with Caravan Farm Theatre and the cast and crew of their new summer musical I.O. U. LAND. IOU LAND is about a Native Man (SAM WOLF) who is cheated out of his land in a card game by some Beefalo ranchers .
Respectfully,
Donald Morin, ba
residing at Suite 706. 27 west Pender Street,, Vancouver, BC, V6 2T2, but now at Caravan Farm theatre, Armstrong , BC donaldmorin@gmail.com, 1.778.881.2275 http://groups.msn.com/TheDonaldMorinWebSite
Below information taken from http://www.caravanfarmtheatre.com/season.html
THE I.O.U.LAND
A NEW WESTERN MUSICAL BY LINZ KENYON
LAND AND FAMILY…
Rodeo champion Sam Wolf loses his land in a game of poker…
His lawyer son Billy is supposed to win it back…
Like a chuckwagon wreck at the Calgary Stampede, everything goes wrong…
STAR CROSSED LOVERS ON THE RUN, MURDER, BETRAYAL,
WILD RIDING COWGIRLS, ENCHANTED POKER GAMES, THE CUSTER LONGKNIFE,
A RING OF FIRE AND A SLEEP OF TWENTY YEARS
Enter Billy Junior, lucky at cards and wishing on stars…
FATHERS, DAUGHTERS, SONS AND LOVERS
WHAT WOULD YOU DO FOR LAND? WHAT WOULD YOU DO FOR FAMILY?
PART FAIRY TALE, PART HORSE OPERA, PART HONKY TONK COMEDY
ALL CANADIAN THEATRE
BASED ON RICHARD WAGNER’S RING CYCLE
DIRECTED BY ESTELLE SHOOK
MUSIC COMPOSED BY LINZ KENYON AND DOUG DODD
SET DESIGNED BY CATHERINE HAHN & HARRY VAN DER SCHEE
COSTUMES DESIGNED BY MARINA SZIJARTO
LIGHTS DESIGNED BY GERALD KING
[Featuring Donald Morin, Ryan Cunningham, Michelle Latimer, Kerriann Cardinal, Courtnenay Stevens
Darren Hynes, and Musicians, Darby Watters, Gillian Cran, and Kim White.]
JULY 19 TO AUGUST 21, 7:30 PM NIGHTLY RAIN OR SHINE, SHow completed August 23rd. Next year 2006 MacBeth is posted
Monday, February 21, 2005
John Graham's trial February 21st. in Vancouver and an opinion
Monday, January 24, 2005
Surveilling the artist
Are we moving towards a mono-cultural world?
Are the great Hollywood movie machine and the Internet (and urbanization, globalization, (etc) decimating regional cultural differences?
How do regional differences, idiosyncrasies, or specific cultural interests inform artistic practice?
Are globalization/urbanization and the mechanics of the Internet and the movie machine decimating regional cultural differences?
Do we accept the concept that globalization frees people from the tyranny of geography?
Is the unwarranted side effect of globalization monoculture?
Do we trust the thesis that the dual directions of the information highway (albeit that the rush hour is going from the centre out) improves the opportunity for distinctly regional cultural workers to communicate and broaden the scope of their audience?
Does the technological ability to choose our cultural experiences as an audience enrich our lives, or does it colonialize our cultural appetite?
Are distinct regionally informed artistic practices important? Dying?
What are the strategies that artists and cultural organizations can exploit to preserve and celebrate cultural autonomy?
END OF National Alliance for Media Artists,.
Donald Morin works as a filmmaker instructor, and regularly works throughout Vancouver with various contract work for the community. As a board member of The Longhouse Native Ministry, Donald helps with the Sunday service and meals offered to various folks of the community. He has performed for MAWO,http://www.mawovancouver.org/info.htm, and in defence of John Graham from AIMS history of the 70s. He continues to work for the Aboriginal community, and enjoys helping empower NAtive emerging artists. Previous years, Donald has performed at the Millenium 2000 Downtown EastSide Cross event @ Openheimer Park, and with The 1997 Aboriginal Cultural Festival. He has also performed for the United Native Nations;The Native Education Centre in Vancouver, The Vancouver Aboriginal Friendship Centre, International Earth Day /Water 4 Life benefit for Sioux Spiritual Leader Arvin Looking Horse, Elder's Day, and at Kids Day at the Raycam Community Centre. Donald completed the entrepreneur program at The Management Training Institute (98) in New Westminster. Donald Morin’s theatre, television/filmmaking association began in 1980 with Barbizon Academy for ling and acting. In 1981, he studied film acting with the late Jim Scotland, and Theatre avec Alex Bruhanski. During that year, he did work for the films Zorro, The Blade, and Britt Eckland’s Columbia Connection 1982,he worked with Sylvester Stallone’s Film First Blood, did a light opera, and any performance work for experience. 1983, he was accepted into the film/and fines arts program at Simon Fraser University, whereupon he graduated with a bachelor degree avec Fine & Performing Arts Major, and a film concentration in 1989. A survivor of the sixties scoop, Donald has gone through 16 foster homes by the time he was four, endured physcial and sexual abuse, and is now seen as an example of overcomng adversity and strife to become a strong role model for Native youth. Miigweech, all my relations
Before the dawn of time, the Great Ice Ages, the coming of the skypeople, the supernatural, and everything this world contains or produced, there was the word. The spirit of the word through the four elements, the four directions, and the light and the dark, created our breath, our time and our being. Oka was beyond the times of Canadianization, Americanization, and Globalization. The Oka Crisis(90), which started my 14 year experience of the 7 Fires 4 U Kitchi Manitou Project, was the continuation of the awaking. The awaking of generations to what we are really here for.
Mother Earth opened up its body to connect her people to the Great Spirit. Regardless of our religions , there is only one Creator. Everything else is part of the servant or the master within this ongoing narrative of the cosmic universe. Out there, but nevertheless we must love our neighbour as much as we love ourselves. Forget the hate, the colour of skin, and the class.
Live life fullests, walk gentle on this earth. May The Great Spirit be with you
Residing about Indian Town.
Monday, July 26, 2004
New Days, New Ways Of Seeing
1: It has been great to be part of this Vancouver community and to develop my artistic career since I arrived here 24 years ago. To read and learn about the other points of view from the emailers and readers is an insight to the complexities of the human spirit, the world we occupy, and our final destinations. I thank you all for your support, criticisms, and challenges which hopefully shapes us into better people. As a cultural professional, filmmaker and performer, I am humbled by the work that I have seen and experienced over the years from the many talented people> out and about, and I know I have so much more to learn regarding the fragile state we live in today, and our roles as artists today. God willing I turn 48 tomorrow July 27. Being a Leo, I have been too dogmatic, opinionate, and egocentric at times, no doubt because of this traits, and my own sense of insecurity. Somewhat older these days, I have mellowed out from the intensity of my early years, but there were many reasons for that intensity, or sense of determination of the times. I was determined not to become the failure that many systemic native and non-natives want others to end up in, when ones sees someone attempting to realize their potential in life. Even today, we are still divided and unsure of the other. Why is that? Politics of survivial? Politics of race? Politics of indifference? Insecurities, jealousy, pettiness, stupidity? What it is? Moving here September 17, 1980, there were two choices for me as a young uneducated native man at the time I left Edmonton, Alberta. Death by drugs or ending up in jail. I kid you not. Finding acceptance in all the wrong places was normal for native people in a society, which is still systemically racist and expects to see the native under the white man, black man, or yellow man.
With the historicity of colonialism, capitalism, empericalism, and the> ideology which came out of the baroque, romantic, modernist, contemporary, and now our "Age of Terror" period of cultural politics, the "Indian" was seen as part of the heathens and infidel classification which developed out of the manifest destiny, and was seen as sub-human. This positioning crept into the dime novels, the folklore, romantic novels, cultural, political, and education apparatuses of the colonial states, and eventually the filmic, radio, and television forms which still exist today. It still exists today in how people> attempt to define Natives today. Moving out of the red neck racism of my early years I was determined more than every to do something with my life when I saw the opportunities in Vancouver. Repressing all the hate, anger, rage, and damaging experiences I endure as a child growing up, I did not look back except at time in my life where I was weaken by the challenges we all must endure at times. I tell you people this because, I believe in what I experienced as an uneducated man to reasonalbly intelligent man, even though I am still haunted by the> experiences of my past. You see I received a package last week from a lawyer in Edmonton, who is representing victims of child abuse during the hundreds of thousands of adoptions of Métis children by the Alberta Government. Not good, now I know what people experience when they have to remember the experiences of residential school, and other institutions which were created to suppress a people or race. All the physical and sexual abuse I experienced as a child flooded back to me. To remember the hate, and anger of that time was haunting> and forlorn. Yet we must carry on. I joined the suit because the system has to be accountable to the suffering many young Métis Children experienced under foster care. I was just one, and many have not survived and not here today.
If any of you ever get a chance to see Dairy of A Métis Child an NFB docu-drama by Alana Obomsowin, check it out. Sad film, but tells the story of Richard Cardinal, who committed suicide at the age of 16 after 16 foster homes. I empathized with the story because I could have been Richard. To find out that I was in 16 foster homes by the time I was four in 1994 was astounding. Now I know why I was so intense, so determined. So determined to success in asystemic society, which hated Indians. People laughed at me, ridiculed me and told me to get out of the business when I was a young actor/model. Perhaps all that rejection at an early age helped, because my skin was as tough as nails and all the adamant hate towards me only made me more determined to success and be better than the "white" man at their game. Racist, maybe, but this world and its cultural politics has been based on the colour of ones skin, and at those times in my life, I was cold, uncaring, and determined to stay alive in a society which wanted me dead or in jail. Today, I am stronger, brighter, and more caring, even though I still experience the racism today and yesterday. I will get through this lawsuit, and I will continue to create stories about life and our journey to our Creator. I may turn 48 tomorrow, but today, I will still have the opportunity to realize my> potential in life instead of settling with life.
2: Thanks for reading, and taking time to learn more about me, and what has defined my character, my development as a human, and my determination to make this world a better place for all of us. I incuded my CV to give you an update on my work.
3: Next current project is the feature film story of Metis Winter Morning. The project will tell the story of young Metis love in the 40s and the> apprehension of Metis children by The State system. If people are interested in being involved with this film project, please email CVs, a letter of interest as to why you would want to be involved with a summation of your goals and aspirations.
Miigweech to all my relations in you.
Donald Morin, ba
DAMOGRAPHY MEDIA
Ae Literacy Manufacturing Company.
Cell #: 1-778-866-2275