Non-profit organization | |
Founded | Montreal, Quebec 2004 |
Headquarters | Canada |
Key people
|
Manon Barbeau, Council of the Atikamekw Nation and the First Nations of Quebec and Labrador Youth Network |
Website | www.wapikoni.ca |
Wapikoni Mobile is an award-winning non-profit organization based in Montreal. It was founded in 2004 by filmmaker Manon Barbeau along with the Council of the Atikamekw Nation and the Youth Council First Nations of Quebec and Labrador (currently known as First Nations of Quebec and Labrador Youth Network). The organization provides mentorship and training in audiovisual creation to Indigenous youth mostly in Canada in the hopes of creating jobs and educational opportunities, countering high rates of suicide, drop-out and addiction. It hosts educational workshops and film screenings to raise awareness and educate the wider public about Indigenous cultures, issues and rights. As of 2014, Wapikoni Mobile has produced over 900 short films and 450 recordings giving a voice to over 4 000 Indigenous youth. Participants have won 140 awards and honours from national and international Human Rights organizations and film festivals.
In the early 2000s, filmmaker Manon Barbeau shot a feature-length film with 15 Atikamekw youths from the Wemotaci community in Quebec. Wapikoni is named after one of Barbeau’s collaborators on the project, a young woman named Wapikoni Awashish, who died in a car crash at the age of 20. In 2004, Barbeau launched the first of the mobile studios that the organization operates today.
Each mobile studio is an RV equipped with an editing station, a small sound studio, a projection and screening area, desktops with Final Cut Pro, and HD cameras and microphones to film with. The organization has been credited with providing Aboriginal youth an outlet for expressing themselves, as well as the tools and skills to do so.
At each stop, a group of participants is welcomed by mentor-filmmakers, youth workers, local assistant-trainers and a local coordinator. The month-long workshops focus on documentary filmmaking and musical recording, offering participants training in writing and directing, along with other behind the scenes work such as filming, sound recording, and editing.