Sahtu Dene documentarian journeys 17,000 km for Indigenous storytelling project
CBC News | December 27, 2021
Categories: news
Tate Juniper traveled across the U.S. in an effort to showcase authentic representation of Indigenous people
At 27, Tate Juniper is stepping into his journalist boots for the first time, travelling 17,000 km across the United States by road, capturing stories and portraits of Indigenous people through his new project We Are The First.
An electrician and accountant by trade, Juniper started the project because "Indigenous representation in popular culture and media has been historically and in the contemporary, lacking," said Juniper, who is Sahtu Dene from Délı̨nę.
"We've moved from being the 'noble savage' to the 'resilient survivor.' But it's still a compartmentalized existence," he said.
He wanted to dig into what authentic representation looks like and how to fight for it.
To find the answer, Juniper bought a camera, some microphones and drove from Inuvik to the U.S. border, where he used the Jay Treaty of 1794, which allows Indigenous people unimpeded access from Canada to the U.S., to cross the border while it was still closed to Canada.
He's interviewed artists, students, tribal leaders, elders, fancy shawl dancers, judges, youth workers and activists, wellness workers, drummers, aestheticians, prairie land preservationists, electronic dance music fans, archaeologists and even iconic rappers Lil Mike and Funny Bone, from Pawnee Nation in Oklahoma.
Juniper's been through Washington, Idaho, Montana, the Dakotas and Chicago. He recently drove along the U.S.-Mexico border to El Paso before heading on to New Mexico.