
2025
The untold story of Ganienkeh, a Mohawk community fighting to regain its traditional culture.
In 1974 a group of Mohawk Indians occupied a defunct girls camp in New York's Adirondack mountains and established a community they called Ganienkeh. Aiming to practice a more traditional lifestyle, and asserting aboriginal title to the land, they stayed for three years, having occasional violent clashes with the local residents. In 1977 they negotiated a (somewhat complicated) land swap with the State, and agreed to move to a permanent home near Plattsburgh, New York, where they remain today. Ganienkeh is one of the only examples of an indigenous people successfully reclaiming land from the United States, but it may not be the last.

When We Went MAD!

Women & the Wind

I am from Siam

VIVA - The opening Ceremony Documentary of Rio 2016

Zimbabwe Wheel

An Indian Story

Arctic Summer

Backstage Bardo

Blade Runner: Mundos Replicantes

Being Seen

Blue Collar & Buddha

39-45 L'histoire des bases sous-marines

Ngā Tamatoa: 40 Years On

Little Foxes

America: Freedom to Fascism

Esperanto

Jaranera

Oman from above

Soul of the Desert

The Farmer and the Shark