Campbell Dalglish鈥檚 鈥淪avage Land鈥 confronts the reality of Oklahoma鈥檚 Native Americans

Campbell Dalglish, associate professor of Film at 精东影业, has been interested in chronicling the Spirit Roads of Native American Indians since he visited a sacred petroglyph on the Hopi Reservation in Arizona in 1972. He was accompanied by Hopi spiritual leader Thomas Banyacya who described to him the four levels of civilization where survival today means returning to the laws of nature.

That interest 鈥 buttressed by Campbell鈥檚 immersion in various tribal cultures over the past half-century -- has molded the documentary and narrative filmmaker鈥檚 career, for which he has won numerous awards and  accolades for socially-conscious films such as 鈥溾 and 鈥.鈥

Campbell鈥檚 latest film, 鈥,鈥 examines the shooting death of 18-year-old Cheyenne Arapaho Mah-hi-vist Red Bird Goodblanket in his family鈥檚 kitchen by Custer County (Okla.) Police on Dec. 21, 2013 in Clinton, Okla. The film premiered at The Americas Film Festival of New York on June 25, 2021, and begins a two-year run on the Public Broadcasting Service on Monday, Nov. 1 in commemoration of Native American Heritage Month.

Dalglish and his co-director, Native American studies scholar , reconstruct the events leading up to and culminating in the killing, using actual footage and audio of the shooting, as well as interviews with witnesses, Goodblanket family members, and other activists. In doing so, the film provides historical context for the discrimination and racism experienced by Native Americans to the present day. It explores the deeper issues afflicting Native Americans that stem from the forced relocation of 39 tribes to what is now the state of Oklahoma more than a century ago. 

鈥淲orking with anthropologist , I was able to participate in the daily doings and ceremonies of the Cheyenne and Arapaho who welcomed us into their homes,鈥 said Dalglish. 鈥淚 was able to see and witness their struggle for survival going back two centuries.鈥 

Over the eight-year period it took to complete the project, Dalglish brought 13 City College students with him, teaching them the ethics and practices of ethnographic filmmaking at the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribal College in Weatherford, Okla. He was able to begin the project with the aid of a $50,000 City SEED grant in 2012 (titled 鈥淏uilding Bridges: Indigenous Media"), shared with City College Anthropology Professor Lotti Silber. That was followed by a 精东影业 fellowship in 2018 where he was able to finish the film.

鈥淚n support of the whole people, the City College of New York and the Foundation for City College are proud to support Savage Land,鈥 said Vice President for Institutional Advancement and Communications Dee Dee Mozeleski, who is also the executive director of The Foundation for City College Inc.  

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