Cheap Broken Rainbow (DVD) (Victoria Mudd, Maria Florio) Price
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| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| DIRECTOR: | Victoria Mudd, Maria Florio |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 1985 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Docurama |
| MPAA RATING: | NR (Not Rated) |
| FEATURES: | Color, DVD-Video, NTSC |
| TYPE: | Activist Documentary, Color, Compassionate, Documentary, Elegiac, English, Exposes, History, Movie, Poignant, Political Corruption, Politics & Government, Race & Ethnicity, Social Injustice, Social Issues, Sociological Documentary, USA |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| MPN: | D9764D |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 767685976432 |
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Customer Reviews of Broken Rainbow
"Land is the center of life to native people" Before actually getting to the deeper issues in this program, there is a historical segment of the Native American cultures (including colonization and subjugation, among other things) of the Hopi and Navajo nations. Also shown is map footage of reservations lands in Arizona and New Mexico which better helps to show how people were moved and how the government divided up parts of the Navajo reservation. There was a peaceful co-existence between these groups for a very long time before the government became involved and upset the balance of Indian lives. <
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>The main theme of `Broken Rainbow' is the forced relocation of 10,000 Navajo and over a hundred Hopi Indians from the land originally granted to them as reservation territory decades ago. It began with a law enacted by Congress in 1974 that instituted the Indian relocation and this was to be completed by 1986. Most of these Indians were required to move to border towns that are great distances from their homeland. This was very problematic for them in that their land is crucial to them for their very survival and to maintain their cultural heritage and lifestyles. <
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>In an effort to forcefully expedite the move, the Department of the Interior and the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) used outrageous methods in this regard and they do not operate with ethical or moral principles. They began to confiscate and kill Navajo and Hopi livestock which was their basic financial foundation. Then they began to destroy the very land that the livestock used for grazing. Following this, the BIA then helped form tribal councils for the Hopi and Navajo but later pitted them against one another regarding issues of land rights. <
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>Recognizing what this stolen Indian land consists of instantly clarifies why the government was so reckless, cruel, and impatient to get their hands on it. The Navajo reservation (including Hopi land which is within the Navajo nation) is abundant with massive amounts of minerals that include oil, natural gas, coal, and Uranium. As stated in the documentary, `energy companies want the resources on Indian land and if necessary, the Native Americans will be sacrificed'. Now there are invasive mining projects happening on the sacred lands of the reservation. To further add to this tragic situation, the government also had a plan to financially decimate the Indian nations. The Department of Interior urged (or coerced is maybe a better word) both tribal councils to sign additional land leases far below market value. As a result, the Navajos remain one of the poorest minorities in America when they should be the richest. They receive a percentage of what is mined off their land but it is negligible in every sense of the word. As for the environment, it is basically ruined for all intents and purposes. The once clean air is now contaminated with lead, mercury dioxides, and sulfuric acids. This is a sad situation for future Indian generations. <
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>`Broken Rainbow' is a very important, poignant, and heartbreaking documentary that is well narrated by Martin Sheen. This program clearly illustrates an ongoing legacy of extreme cruelty against Native Americans by our government. It is also a message that money and big business completely overshadow the welfare and considerations of the human populace. I highly recommend this documentary to everyone, it is a must see. <
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Fossil Fuels vs Indiginous Peoples. Oil wins.
This should be a film that every American should see. (You might recall it won the Oscar for best documentary in 1985). It documents the impact of a law signed by President Ford (on a ski vacation) that forced relocation of thousands of Navajo from their tribal land. The reason? There was hundreds of millions of dollars of coal, natural gas, and oil in that land and therefore the needs of the Navajo were irrelevant in light of the outrageous profits that could be made.
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>As the film develops there appears to be no crime vicious enough (short of
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>deliberate murder of native americans) that was not committed against hese Indians to force them off their land and more importantly, their livelihood. The Indians needed this land to raise sheep for food, clothes,
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>and making rugs for sale to outsiders. It gave them a sense of dignity and self-worth. When the law was signed, forcing them off their reservation, the goverment slaughtered their sheep knowing that this would
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>put the Indians "out of business." If that was not enough, they took
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>bulldozers and removed the vegetation, so that the land was no longer of any use to the Indian. In light of all the other injustices practiced on Native Americans, this was the last straw. It reduced many of the
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>Indians to poverty, hunger, and in rare cases, premature death.
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>The insensitivity of the white politicians to the plight of the Indians is
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>truly a shameful chapter in our history...as depicted in the film, one of the congressmen from Arizona argued that relocation of the Indian was "routine...plenty of Americans have to relocate." The issue was not
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>merely relocation, but the deliberate and violent destruction of the Indians' way of life.
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> I apologize to all Native Americans who suffered as a result of these mean-spirited policies.
dull & naive plea by evil white folk for noble red man. ugh?
this is the sort of well intentioned but overlong documentary that so often wins an academy award. this one deals with the persistent history of land grabs by anglos which has devastated indians, in this case specifically the navaho. the history is horrible, but the filmmaker here offers no new perspective. im moved to anguish, but not to action, and until that day arrives, masturbatory meditations like this will, i guess, have to suffice.
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