Dakota language activist aspires to create documentary
A woman from the Wahpeton Dakota Nation, who has spent the past year working with first-language speakers and the Northern Dakota Language Group on the retention of the Dakota language, has focused her attention now on bringing those lessons and stories to film.
Following a competitive application process, which involved the submission of an actual film idea, Lois Standing was one of only eight people selected for the National Screen Institute’s (NSI) 2021 IndigiDocs program. The part-time online program offers customized training for Indigenous documentary filmmakers who have an idea for a 10-minute film, and Standing will be taught by some of Canada’s top documentary professionals. Program co-manager Kaya Wheeler told paNOW Standing shows a lot of promise.
“The jury really enjoyed her story and we are just very much looking forward to seeing how it develops over the next five weeks,” she said.
Standing, project lead for the Northern Dakota Language Group at Wahpeton, started the initiative last fall in collaboration with her father, who leads the sessions along with three other first-language speakers.


