DOCUMENTARY
FEATURES THE UNTOLD STORY OF A NAVAJO FAMILY
By Graig Uhlin Arizona Daily Wildcat U. Arizona
(U-WIRE) TUCSON, Ariz. --
Amidst all the independent voices heard at the Arizona International Film
Festival this weekend, one told a tale of love, hope and injustice.
The documentary film, titled
"The Return of Navajo Boy," narrates the story of the Cly family - their
reunion with an estranged family member and their adversities with the
hazardous uranium mines of Monument Valley where they live.
"The film was about giving
the Clys a voice," said co-producer Bennie Klain. "They had been portrayed
by outsiders for so long."
Director Jeff Spitz discovered
the Cly family is among the most commonly photographed groups of people,
appearing on postcards and films relating to Monument Valley. These photos,
however, "never identified the family and the family never spoke," Spitz
said.
"The Return of Navajo Boy"
originated with a film made around 50 years ago in Monument Valley, simultaneously
as John Ford was filming his westerns with John Wayne.
Titled "Navajo Boy," the docu-drama
ran 28 minutes with no sound, and featured the lifestyles of the Navajo
people - people who were later discovered to be members of the Cly family.
The film was sent to Spitz
by the son of movie's director. Spitz became intrigued by the film and
was determined to tell the story of the people in it.
"If these people could speak
I wondered what they'd say - not in the film, but what they would say about
the camera and being filmed," Spitz said.
Spitz intended to portray
the family differently than other documentaries that exploited the family's
image.
"They were very stage-y, expository
documentaries about a very specific facet of Navajo culture," he said.
"It was always silent people who were being described by a white narrator."
Spitz said the film gives
a voice to those who previously had none, and when the Clys did start speaking,
a touching story surfaced.
Elsie May Cly Begay, featured
in the film and was in the original "Navajo Boy" movie as a child, told
a story of her long-lost brother John Wayne Cly -named by the movie star
himself while filming - who was taken from her family by white missionaries
after their mother died.
The boy had never known his
own family, but after reading an article about the return of the "Navajo
Boy" film, he contacted the filmmakers. Spitz then documented the reunion
of a family torn apart.
"The one thing that resonates
with me is the chain of events that happened after the old film turned
up," Cly Begay said through an interpreter, referring to John Wayne Cly's
return. "It teaches people the value of not giving up hope because something
this extraordinary has happened."
The tale of this reunion is
meant to remind viewers of the importance of communication, family and
maintaining the traditional Navajo culture - values upheld by the local
community organization Navajo Network.
On invitation, Elsie Mae Cly
Begay and her grandchildren accepted an invitation to a potluck hosted
by Navajo Network, an organization of Navajos that encourages students
to stay in school, held yesterday at the American Indian Studies Graduate
Center.
Cly Begay said the event allowed
her to put a human face on Tucson and to meet other Navajos. She also met
a girl who was an extended family member.
The film also documents the
adversities the Cly family has faced as a result of the uranium mining
of Monument Valley.
Bernie Cly, who used to work
on the mines, is currently suing the U.S. government for monetary compensation,
but the government is refusing payment. According to Spitz, there has been
a lack of communication on both sides.
"With the film we can educate
more people and shed light on our situation," said Cly Begay. "We can get
a reaction from people who are able to do something about it."
While in Tucson for the festival,
Spitz searched the photo archives of the Arizona State Museum for additional
documentation of the Cly family. Klain said any additional material found
would be used to add five minutes to the film - qualifying it for broadcast
length on PBS, but none was found.
"The Return of Navajo Boy"
will air on PBS later this fall.
© 2000
Arizona Daily Wildcat via U-WIRE
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