Daughter of a Lost Bird

The documentary DAUGHTER OF A LOST BIRD explores ethics surrounding Native American adoption via a singular story as an entry point into a more complicated national issue. In many ways, Kendra Potter is a perfect example of cultural assimilation, a modern representation of the painful phrase, "kill the Indian, save the man." She is a thriving woman who grew up in a loving, upper middle-class white family, and feels no significant loss with the absence of Native American culture or family in her life. And yet, as a Blackfeet/Salish woman, director Brooke Swaney could not imagine that Kendra could be content or complete without understanding her heritage. So together they embark on a 7 year journey.

After 34 years apart, Kendra finds her biological mother April and they meet face-to-face in Portland, Oregon. The film, both instigator and follower, documents Kendra on her journey to reconnect with her birth mother April, also a Native adoptee, and returns to her Native homelands. April Newcomb is a woman who has done a lot of work to heal. Her childhood was marked by physical and emotional abuse at the hands of her adopted father, causing her to leave home at 15. After years spent lost in addiction, on and off the streets of Portland, OR and three years trapped in sex trafficking, she found the strength to escape and seek a better life.   We watch both women navigate what it means to be Native, and to belong to a tribe from the outside looking in.

Through Kendra and April’s unique experiences of growing up without knowledge of their heritage or tribal affiliation, we learn with and from them as they explore elements of their biological ties. The viewer learns, along with the women, of their inherited cultural trauma as well as some of the beauty of the Lummi ways neither knew while growing up.  It’s a turning point for them both.  A year after the reunion in Oregon, Kendra ventures for her first time to Lummi to experience the Stommish canoe races with April, see Lummi Island, hear from a tribe, and meet a family she never knew. They are both saddled with a new identity, unsure of how the story unfolds. 

Director Brooke Pepion Swaney will be in attendance for a Q & A after the screening.

 
Director: Brooke Pepion Swaney (Blackfeet/Salish)
Writer: Brooke Pepion Swaney (Blackfeet/Salish)
Producers: Brooke Pepion Swaney, Kendra Mylnechuk Potter, Jeri Rafter
Language: English

USA | 2020 | 66 mins

PREVIEW SHORT FILM: 

Kicking the Clouds
Directors: Sky Hopinka (Ho-Chunk Nation)

USA | 2021 | 15 mins | English

This film is a reflection on descendants and ancestors, guided by a 50 year old audio recording of my grandmother learning the Pechanga language from her mother.   After being given this tape by my mother, I interviewed her and asked about it, and recorded her ruminations on their lives and her own.  The footage is of our chosen home in Whatcom County, Washington, where my family still lives, far from our homelands in Southern California, yet a home nonetheless.

This film is available in the BIRRARANGGA Film Festival 3-pass and 5-pass ticket packages.

 

AUSTRALIAN PREMIERE

DATE
Monday 27 March 8.15pm

VENUE
ACMI Fed Square Cinema 2

CLASSIFICATION
Unclassified - Restricted to persons 15 and over unless accompanied by an adult

ENTRY
Full $22 | Concession $17 | Blak Tix $13 | 3 Pass $45 | 5 Pass $75