Youth movement grows like wildfire
3:46
MADAGASCAR - Southern Highlands
5:23
13 жыл бұрын
MADAGASCAR MORNING by Corinne
2:57
13 жыл бұрын
CUBAN KIDS' DANCE CLASS
5:45
14 жыл бұрын
AFRICAN SAFARI
4:10
14 жыл бұрын
MADAGASCAR DIARY - By Antoine
4:15
14 жыл бұрын
JEFF GIBBS: Life Voyages Documentary
26:13
WWF Young Volunteers In Madagascar
6:30
HAIDA GWAII - Raven and the First Men
3:41
Dreaming Green
2:51
14 жыл бұрын
Hidden In My Home
4:55
14 жыл бұрын
Do You Understand?
3:59
14 жыл бұрын
News Profile of Jeff Gibbs (1996)
2:09
LIFEquest: "A Journey For Our Planet"
7:54
It's Up to U Now
4:31
16 жыл бұрын
A World Of Solutions by Jeff Gibbs
3:56
Пікірлер
@barrygouthro6315
@barrygouthro6315 2 ай бұрын
Love the Haida Islands . Love to go there. ❤🎉😅
@barrygouthro6315
@barrygouthro6315 2 ай бұрын
No peace . Terrible palace to be . I must escape .
@barrygouthro6315
@barrygouthro6315 2 ай бұрын
So called civilisation is dangerous 😮
@mistyjones599
@mistyjones599 8 ай бұрын
Beautiful and powerful!!
@TheMommylupul
@TheMommylupul 9 ай бұрын
This is beautiful. So, so sad what could have been 🫶🏻
@Akraven5235
@Akraven5235 Жыл бұрын
Loved this!
@CaraRama
@CaraRama Жыл бұрын
Beautiful ❤
@dietrichdietrich7763
@dietrichdietrich7763 Жыл бұрын
this was boring (making me fall asleep)
@tkitchkeesic
@tkitchkeesic Жыл бұрын
I know that drum lol
@raddadray7535
@raddadray7535 Жыл бұрын
Thank you to this narrator for her great narration of the Haida people.I’m from the south coast of BC and always have an appreciation for First Nation culture.Praises.
@momolly03
@momolly03 2 жыл бұрын
Some touching sentences of this beautiful documentary: "The lesson of Haida culture is that mankind can live and prosper on the earth without having to screw it up." "There can be harmony between human beings and the natural world." "Technology today has changed our lives and attitudes within the world around us, but technology today does not reflect wisdom or intelligence."
@rosebudadkins6803
@rosebudadkins6803 2 жыл бұрын
Seeing the destruction of the majestic tree people hurt. My heart cried. They give so much and are not thanked. My tree people are gorgeous. They give great advice and have names. When did you last spend time with them? Ask their name and they will tell you. Yes, they have names!
@rosebudadkins6803
@rosebudadkins6803 2 жыл бұрын
Man has over fished oceans for greed. Sea life needs to survive. It’s their home created for them. We are the intruders. Man was to care for the earth and all the abundance. However evil greed has taken over. The earth was created with balance and renewable resources.
@kirandeepkaur3736
@kirandeepkaur3736 2 жыл бұрын
thanks for the posting. Hope to see more videos like this.
@mosesstewart7445
@mosesstewart7445 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the sharing of your heart and the true nature of your culture. be strong in your heart of your beliefs. So amazing.
@odettecam
@odettecam 2 жыл бұрын
23:50 "you never know who you are going to meet in the forest" Bill; a mad artist woman or man ("go and get mad and see what you find"). Tricky joker ravens. Cheers
@odettecam
@odettecam 2 жыл бұрын
"the battle is won, not the war" "in their system, commercial enterprise takes priority over the wellbeing of the environment". Gujaaw on 'Rediscovery' camps: "There's no better setting to learn about nature and culture, it's interesting the whole different light in which you see each other. Most interesting is the perspective you get on yourself; especially for the kids who haven't been outside the trappings of civilization".
@odettecam
@odettecam 2 жыл бұрын
"Todays problems aren't of the ability of the Earth to provide, it is that we are demanding too much riches and energy for ourselves. The lesson of Haida culture is that man"kind" can live on Earth and prosper without having to screw it up". Gujaaw "Technology has changed our lives and attitudes within the world around us, but technology today does not reflect wisdom or intelligence".
@odettecam
@odettecam 2 жыл бұрын
This is a much better way to teach ecology (from a cultural perspective).
@odettecam
@odettecam 2 жыл бұрын
Gujaaw Chief of the Haida Nation: "The Haida Culture is built upon an intimate relationship and oneness with the land and seas. Civilization it seems is a concept that measures how far people can be removed from the natural world; how different we can portray ourselves from other members of the animal kingdom. This deliberate trend has brought us to the environmental crisis of the world today." Elon Musk on love: "Mars projects are a love for Civilization". "Tesla is a love for the Environment". Can anyone spot the contradictions? Which one is not like the other?
@healthdoc100
@healthdoc100 2 жыл бұрын
I live in NY, USA , and never knew about this area before seeing your research in this documentary. Thank you for being peace, beauty and love into our lives today with this film . ❤️❤️❤️🙏🙏🙏
@simonc61
@simonc61 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting. I worked on this film (sound) and only saw it on TV on release, haven't seen it since. Just the most amazing experience spending 8 months there.
@jeffreygibbs
@jeffreygibbs 2 жыл бұрын
Glad you were able to see it again here. You and the crew did an incredible job in creating this film. It still is my favourite documentary film about Haida Gwaii.
@simonc61
@simonc61 2 жыл бұрын
@@jeffreygibbs thanks. It was actually only Jeff and myself but we spent loads of time with Guujaaw, and also Terry and Charlotte Husband, not to mention a host of amazing plane and helicopter pilots, fishermen and numerous other people. Interesting story, when we were there Mike Salisbury, the producer, visited for two weeks with his young children. Ben, his son later went onto become a composer, not surprisingly working on BBC natural history films. He also did the very atmospheric scores for the film Ex- Machina and the TV series Devs.
@jeffreygibbs
@jeffreygibbs 2 жыл бұрын
@@simonc61 You had an incredible experience. Thanks for sharing. I hope you make it back to Haida Gwaii one day. Great to hear about Ben Salisbury too; I love his film score work. The Ex Machina score was incredible.
@elisaramirez4788
@elisaramirez4788 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@stukawaffe8882
@stukawaffe8882 2 жыл бұрын
I had quite a nice time watching this, sad too see the shortage of valuable salmon now days now
@MelodyJacksonPatterson1975
@MelodyJacksonPatterson1975 2 жыл бұрын
I learned about this nation in my Sunday School class. Wow I had no idea
@tk23westerners89
@tk23westerners89 3 жыл бұрын
I have learned to live with nature in every corner of BC and the Yukon Everywhere but Haida. Before I move on I would like to experience
@biggiedabzz
@biggiedabzz 3 жыл бұрын
My great great great grandma came from haida gwaii on a war canoe to sooke in Victoria back a long time ago
@alexaphoenix2627
@alexaphoenix2627 3 жыл бұрын
And they say white men CAN'T dance!!!
@anonymousanonymous6735
@anonymousanonymous6735 3 жыл бұрын
Do the Canadian Haida consider the Alaskan Haida the same people? Why or why not? I'm from Alaska but I am not Haida. I'm just curious! I'm from Juneau, our state capital
@ava-bethwilliams4596
@ava-bethwilliams4596 3 жыл бұрын
We are the same nation just on different sides of the boarder
@jasonzhang3797
@jasonzhang3797 3 жыл бұрын
This is a great video with beatiful stories, videos and cultrual inthoduction.
@lalani888ARTblue
@lalani888ARTblue 3 жыл бұрын
💜💌
@kovacsv7022
@kovacsv7022 3 жыл бұрын
God bles America . Greetings from Magyarország from a Red Falcon Michelangelo Naddeo : The 10 000 old Year Hungarian Continuitas
@AnasHanno
@AnasHanno 3 жыл бұрын
art class go brrrrrrrrrr
@gilbertsinister5252
@gilbertsinister5252 3 жыл бұрын
social studies go brrrrrrrrrr
@MrOozieNelson
@MrOozieNelson 3 жыл бұрын
Anthropology class go brrrrrrr
@rhynnal9051
@rhynnal9051 3 жыл бұрын
Linguistics studies go brrr
@elizabethflynn8455
@elizabethflynn8455 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for posting this.
@safeysmith6720
@safeysmith6720 4 жыл бұрын
Hey. I’m just trying to find something about Haida history, their expansion and interaction with the other indigenous nations and so on. There is nothing to be found in this?
@safeysmith6720
@safeysmith6720 4 жыл бұрын
Ok well I wrote this before watching the documentary. It’s pretty good! I find the Haida to be a very interesting people!
@baljeetkaurna7827
@baljeetkaurna7827 4 жыл бұрын
why killing fish
@sidheksingh1599
@sidheksingh1599 4 жыл бұрын
hey! why they cut sooooo many treeeeees!!!!
@Dopamine1245
@Dopamine1245 4 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately Haida gwaii is about as west as you can get, making it prime place for government influence to come in and exploit natural resources, you can cut trees and float them straight to Asian markets. There has been a history of protest from the Haida, at Lyle island in 1985 there was a anti-logging protest, resulting in 72 arrests by the RCMP, but in the end, the Haidas won and culminated in the creation of Gwaii Haanas National park, which protects a large portion of the island from logging and destruction of cultural sites.
@elaineflohr9145
@elaineflohr9145 2 жыл бұрын
Makes me cringe. How sad is our society! Loved to hear about these islands. Love from Australia❤️
@sidheksingh1599
@sidheksingh1599 4 жыл бұрын
was very helpful thank youuuuuuu
@meganrique1901
@meganrique1901 4 жыл бұрын
Home!!!!
@stuartross2908
@stuartross2908 4 жыл бұрын
What a place !
@heydi-lelorenzo603
@heydi-lelorenzo603 4 жыл бұрын
People are tiny
@christineveazey4345
@christineveazey4345 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@QueenYak
@QueenYak 4 жыл бұрын
What a treasure this video is. Thank you for posting.
@brarab1981
@brarab1981 4 жыл бұрын
Sheila
@MelodyJacksonPatterson1975
@MelodyJacksonPatterson1975 2 жыл бұрын
Amen
@trudychatwin1840
@trudychatwin1840 4 жыл бұрын
Great to see Guujaaw and Jaalen on such a journey!
@zenmarqzenway
@zenmarqzenway 5 жыл бұрын
It was a giant prehistoric Raven finding Noah's ark after the great flood. Digging them out of the sand where they could escape the ark. Not only setting humans free but also the creatures the humans had gathered pairs of before Noah set sail. *Excerpts from lost chapter out of Genesis
@CRP7000
@CRP7000 4 жыл бұрын
Whoa what!? Really
@buriedjam
@buriedjam 6 жыл бұрын
staggering genius
@colourheists5587
@colourheists5587 6 жыл бұрын
magnificent
@phonicdictation9856
@phonicdictation9856 6 жыл бұрын
21 427
@boxxurshorts1659
@boxxurshorts1659 6 жыл бұрын
massive respect of the highest order with many thanks
@baganscissors7224
@baganscissors7224 6 жыл бұрын
masterclass
@luckybooclan
@luckybooclan 7 жыл бұрын
Thankful for all you do, great work all round.
@jeffreygibbs
@jeffreygibbs 7 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@jameshenderson3925
@jameshenderson3925 10 жыл бұрын
Raven and first man; After the great flood had at long last receded, Raven had gorged himself on the delicacies left by the receding water, so for once, perhaps the first time in his life, he wasn't hungry. but his other appetites, his curiosity and the unquenchable itch to meddle and provoke things, to play tricks on the world and its creatures, these remained unsatisfied. Raven gazed up and down the beach. It was pretty, but lifeless. There was no one about to upset, or play tricks upon. Raven sighed. He crossed his wings behind him and strutted up and down the sand, his shiny head cocked, his sharp eyes and ears alert for any unusual sight or sound. The mountains and sea, the sky now ablaze with the sun by day and the moon and stars he had placed there, it was all pretty, but lifeless. Finally Raven cried out to the empty sky with a loud exasperated cry. And before the echoes of his cry faded from the shore, he heard a muffled squeak. He looked up and down the beach for its source and saw nothing. He strutted back and and forth, once, twice, three times and still saw nothing. Then he spied a flash of white in the sand. There, half buried in the sand was a giant clamshell. As his shadow fell upon it, he heard another muffled squeak. Peering down into the opening between the halves of the shell, he saw it was full of tiny creatures, cowering in fear at his shadow. Raven was delighted. Here was a break in the monotony of the day. But how was he to get the creatures to come out of their shell and play with him? Nothing would happen as long as they stayed inside the giant clamshell. They were not going to come out as long as they were so afraid of him. So Raven leaned over his head, close to the shell, and with all the cunning and skill of that smooth trickster's tongue, that had so often gotten him in and out of so many misadventures during his troubled and troublesome existence, he coaxed and cajoled and coerced the little creatures to come out and play in his wonderful shiny new world. As you know the Raven has two voices, one harsh and strident, and the other which he used now, a seductive, bell-like croon which seems to come from the depth of the sea, or out of the cave where winds are born. It is an irresistable sound, one of the loveliest in the world. It wasn't long before first one and then another of the little shell-dwellers emerged from the shell. Some scurried back when they saw the Raven, but eventually curiosity overcame their caution and all of them had crept or scrambled out. Very strange creatures they were: two legged like Raven, but otherwise very different. They had no feathers. Nor fur. They had no gret beak. Their skin was pale, and they were naked except for the dark hair upon round, flat-featured heads. Instead of strong wings like raven, they had think stick-like arms that waved and fluttered constantly. They were the first humans. For a long time Raven amused himself with these new playthings. Laughing as they explored with wonder a much expanded world. Sometimes they helped each other, sometimes they fought over something they had found. Raven even taught them some tricks, but soon he became tired of their ceaseless activity. For one thing, they were so helpless out in the world. They needed shelter from the sun and the rain. They were so fearful and seemed so small. And there were no girls among them, only boys. Raven was about to shove these tired, demanding and annoying creatures back into their shell and forget them, when, as so often happens with Raven, he had an idea for some fun. Raven began to search for the girls. For it is the way of things in the world that there are both males and females of every creature. Somewhere there must be girls. Raven searched and searched. Under logs and behind rocks, he looked. But he could not find the hiding place of the first girls. But as he searched, the tide was going out, and as it reached its lowest, the Raven spotted some giant Chitons clinging to the rocks. These giant shell fish had but one shell, fastened tightly to the rocks with huge soft lips around their edges. Raven pried one loose with his beak. And there inside was a girl. He pried off another, and another, and another in each was a girl. They were very similar to the creatures he had found in the clamshell, but more like the Chiton, softer and rounder, in contrast to the hard shell and strong muscles of the clam. And these were just as frightened of the Raven. He gathered them onto his back with difficulty, and brought them to the boys he had found in the clamshell. Raven was expecting the boy creatures to be very happy he had found the girl creatures, but to his surprise. They were frightened of them and some even ran back into the Giant clamshell to hide. The girl creatures were just as shy and huddled together watching the males with fearful and curious eyes. Both the boy and girl creatures seemed very modest and sought to cover their bodies with strips of kelp and woven sea weed from the shore. The boy creatures were astonished and embarrassed and confused by feelings they had never before had. They didn't know how to behave. But some of them overcame their fear and began to do things to attract the attention of the girl creatures Raven had brought. Some began to show off the tricks they had been taught - leaping and running and wrestling with other boy creatures. Some of the girls creatures overcame their shyness, first with quick glances then finally allowing the boy creatures to approach them, and even leaving the safety of their huddled group of girl creatures. Gradually the two groups began to mingle into one and just as gradually the boy creatures and girl creatures overcame all their fears and paired off, walking hand in hand, their eyes absorbed in each other totally. Raven watched all this with increasing interest and surprise. Among all the creatures of the world, there were few whose males and females were so very different. The males proud, agile and strong, the females gentle, soft and tender. Sometimes the males would be too rough in their play with the females and there would be tears. But those same tears seemed to have an emotional power over the males bringing out out of them protective instincts. The strengths of each balanced the weakness of each. And since that day, Raven has never been bored. In fact, at times he has almost regreted bringing the first men and women together. From the strong muscles of the clam and the soft lips of the Chiton, from the pairing of these first people came the first families. Children were born, some strong and male, some soft and female. Many generations have been born, have grown and flourished, have built and created or fought and destroyed. Many have blamed the Raven for playing a terrible joke on humanity, for often men and women just barely get along, but somehow from this strange combination of reason and intuition, of muscle and emotion arose that which was needed for the race to survive the storms of life on the shores. Raven himself felt strange protective urges for these first people. Though a glutton and trickster by nature, he would again and again provide for these creatures he found in the clamshell. In time he would bring them the Sun, Moon and Stars; Fire; Salmon and Cedar, teach them the secrets of hunting, and the world. Raven would watch these weak creatures become both strong and loving, courageous and compassionate, able to fend for themselves and survive. And their children were no timid shell-dwellers, but they continued to be children of the wild coast, of the stormy shores between the land and the sea. They challenged the strength of the stormy north Pacific wresting their livelihoods from the sea even as they made their homes on its shores.
@randychaparral2124
@randychaparral2124 6 жыл бұрын
you have the right last name
@pillerman7954
@pillerman7954 3 жыл бұрын
What is the theme of this story
@natepereira6106
@natepereira6106 4 ай бұрын
thank you for the transcript