
2019
No community can express the pain of losing an elder, especially when one was presumed to be the last fluent speaker of their language and the language is nearing endangerment.
“We left our language and started speaking others’. The girls have got married and have left for the villages. Boys are getting married in villages. It should be taught to children”. — Gyani Maiya Sen-Kusunda The Gi Mihaq (also known as Kusunda) was a semi-nomadic hunter and gatherer community that settled in villages around the mid-western Nepalese district of Dang. They have long lost their native language Mihaq (Kusunda), to acculturation and other barriers to active use. The community also lost their 83-year-old elder Gyani Maiya Sen-Kusunda in 2020, the most and the only known fluent Kusunda speaker then. Filmed in Kulmor in the Dang District in 2018, this openly-licensed documentary is a memoir of Sen-Kusunda in her own words and a biography of her people who were forced to leave their language and cultural identity. Kusunda is being revived by Kamala Sen Khatri, Sen-Kusunda’s younger sister, and Uday Raj Aaley, a local researcher who is the key interviewer for this film.

Gyani Maiya Sen Kusunda
Self

Uday Raj Aaley
Self

Sanjib Chaudhary
Self

Amazonie, les murmures de la forêt

Mad About English!

Cry Rock

Lord of the Dance/Destroyer of Illusion

Stay Maybe? We Think We Made a Film

Talkers

National Geographic - Everest, Una Sfida Lunga 50 Anni

Průzkumníci

Mountain Queen: The Summits of Lhakpa Sherpa

Brilliant Moon: Glimpses of Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche

Namaste Nepal

Se ti Sabir

Breaking Stones

25-dollar Sisyphus: The Story of Himalayan Porters

The Brave Class

Death to the King

The Velvet Queen

The Haida in Canada

Those Who Come, Will Hear

The Nightingale Sings