Makepeace Productions
Contact Outreach Coordinator

We are now launching a wide-ranging Outreach Campaign for our new film We Still Live Here —Âs Nutayuneân,
a documentary about the return of the Wampanoag language. For queries about other Makepeace Productions films,
please contact info@MakepeaceProductions.com


NOVEMBER IS NATIVE AMERICAN HERITAGE MONTH

Host the film's Director, Anne Makepeace, for an educational or community
screening and discussion of her award-winning documentary We Still Live Here.
For detailed information, please contact our Outreach Coordinator, Caroline Berz:
(617) 359-2404  ·  Caroline@MakepeaceProductions.com


 

slideshow

WE STILL LIVE HEREÂs Nutayuneân tells an astonishing story of linguistic and cultural revival among the Wampanoag of Cape Cod and Martha's Vineyard. Celebrated every Thanksgiving as "the Indians" who saved the Pilgrims, then largely forgotten, the Wampanoag are now saying loud and clear, in their Native tongue, "Âs Nutayuneân"—"We still live here." This is the first time a language with no speakers after many generations has been revived in a Native American community.


Anne Makepeace
Anne Makepeace
Director of We Still Live Here


For more information about how to host an educational or community screening, please contact our Outreach Coordinator
Caroline Berz
(617) 359-2404
Caroline@MakepeaceProductions.com

USEFUL CULTURAL LINKS

Wôpanâak Language Reclamation Project

The Reawakening of a Lost Language.

Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe

Aquinnah Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head

Cultural Survival

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View Film Clips


        
 

Mae Alice Baird

Mae Alice Baird
The first Native speaker of Wampanoag in a century
(Photo courtesy of Anne O'Brien)

poster
Click to read more about the film