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"You must care for everything, as the People, the animals and nature all live together in this world. We People cannot survive by ourselves alone. " In this book, a Dene First Nations boy is told enchanting tales by his Granny Elizabeth, his Granny Harriet, and his Uncle Alfred. The stories are about how we must care for our animal friends and how we must cherish the land. The wondrous Spirit of Nature shows up throughout the stories which are The Tree by the Woodpile, The Wolf, and The Mountain, the Wind and the Wildflowers.

Produktbeschreibung
"You must care for everything, as the People, the animals and nature all live together in this world. We People cannot survive by ourselves alone. " In this book, a Dene First Nations boy is told enchanting tales by his Granny Elizabeth, his Granny Harriet, and his Uncle Alfred. The stories are about how we must care for our animal friends and how we must cherish the land. The wondrous Spirit of Nature shows up throughout the stories which are The Tree by the Woodpile, The Wolf, and The Mountain, the Wind and the Wildflowers.
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Autorenporträt
Raymond Yakeleya Biography Raymond Yakeleya is an award winning Dene television Producer, Director and Writer. Raymond is originally from Tulita (formally Fort Norman) in the central Northwest Territories and he now calls Edmonton home. Raymond has over 30 year experience in the television industry. The documentary films he has made have been selected for showing at festivals around the world including the John Grierson Film Festival, the Robert Faherty Festival and the Margaret Mead Film Festival, as well as the Museum of the American Indian in New York and the British Museum of Mankind in London. He has won national and international awards for his work. Raymond received his photography and advanced television production at the Banff School of Fine Arts and attended the University of Southern California summer cinema program in Hollywood, Los Angeles. In 1979, Raymond produced, for CBC, the first award winning documentary titled We Remember, and in 1981 produced and directed The Last Mooseskin Boat, also an award winner, for the National Film Board. Since 1998, Raymond has produced five national television series and is currently in production of another. Raymond has always believed that Canada's Native people need to have a voice in mainstream media in order to tell our People's stories, our way. With the passing of many of our Elders, the telling of these stories has become more important. Raymond is a guest presenter at NorthWord NWT 2018 festival in Yellowknife.