DIGADOHI: Lands, Cherokee and the Trail of Tears
Overview
- Genre
- Anthropology and History
- Synopsis
DIGADOHI means lands in Cherokee and the story of their removal is recorded in the documents and archaeology at places along the Trail of Tears like the Snelson-Brinker farm in Missouri, and in the traditions and family histories of the Cherokee today. July 4th, 2017 the historic Snelson-Brinker cabin was burnt to the ground. A witness site to ethnic cleansing, the farm is one of the few sites on the Trail of Tears to be studied. Using cutting edge archaeological methods, STEM, and archival research, a group of researchers, community activists and Cherokee leaders work to rescue a historic property from the arsonist's flames and identify the graves of the Cherokee who died there.
The film chronicles a year of those investigations and others along the Trail
of Tears and weaves the family stories - European, African, and Native - that
were unearthed there into the national story of America.- Stage
- finished
- Running time
- 56 and 61 minutes
Credits
- Monty Dobson ... Director, Producer, Writer, Editor, Cinematographer
- Andrew Devenney ... Co-Producer
- Joshua D Koenig ... Co-Producer
- Daniel Bracken ... Co-Editor
- Deborah Taffa ... Co-Writer
Production Details
- Prod. Co.
- Stratigraphic Productions LLC
- Country
- United States
- Years of Production
- 2017-2019
- Locations
- Missouri, Alabama, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Georgia
Distribution Details
- Release year
- 2020
- Festivals
- Tribal Film Festival. The International Archaeology Film Festival
- Distribution
- Public Television via NETA - National Educational Telecommunications Association
- Language
- English
Photos
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