The Mohawk Short Film Fest

April 26

7:00 pm

Title reads: Aultsville Theatre presents The Mohawk Short Film Fest featuring the Canadian premiere of Kanenon:we - Original Seeds. A film by Katsitsionni Fox. The film title is in front of a pair of hands holding corn kernels.

Please note

Aultsville Theatre serves as a rental venue for the majority of our events and is not responsible for the content or use of special effects during the performance.  If you have questions regarding the content of the show, please contact us at gm@aultsvilletheatre.com for more information.

Aultsville Theatre is proud to present The Mohawk Short Film Fest on Saturday, April 26, 2025. Featuring four films by local film makers Katsitsionni Fox and Shelby Mitchell-Adams the evening brings five short films by local Akwesasne film makers and features the Canadian Premiere of Kanenon:we – Original Seeds (2025).

Films to be screened include:

Ohenton Kariwhatekwen- Thanksgiving Address– Created by Friends of the Akwesasne Freedom School

Radio Bingo (2023) Directed by Shelby Mitchell-Adams

Water Moccasin (2023) Directed by Shelby Mitchell-Adams

Tentsítewahkwe – We Pick It Up Again (2024) Directed by Katsitsionni Fox

Kanenon:we – Original Seeds (2025) Directed by Katsitsionni Fox

Film Summaries

Radio Bingo Directed by Shelby Mitchell-Adams

To help revitalize the Mohawk language, a local reservation radio station incorporates the Mohawk language into a game of Radio Bingo.

Tentsítewahkwe – We Pick It Up Again (2024)

As a young girl, Jessica Shenandoah (Wolf Clan from the Akwesasne Mohawk Nation) learned about harvesting medicine and edible plants alongside her mother and grandmother. Contemporary Native Peoples are often separated many generations from their traditional knowledge due to the effects of colonial realities such as boarding school, forced religion, and land theft. In Tentsítewahkwe, the latest film centering Native women by Mohawk filmmaker Katsitsionni Fox, Shenandoah goes on a journey across four seasons and multiple Native territories to connect with other knowledge keepers reviving the land-based wisdom of foremothers in order to return to time-honored practices of pottery making, mat weaving, hide tanning, medicine making, food gathering, and more. Jessica embodies the Mohawk concept of tentsítewahkwe as she picks up knowledge of the old ways, these slow methods of creating and connecting in reciprocity with the Earth. Tentsítewahkwe is at once a thank you to the Native women who imbued their descendants with blood memory of these practices and a promise to future generations of Native Peoples that these practices will stay alive for generations to come.

Kanenon:we – Original Seeds

Kanenon:we – Original Seeds carries viewers into the grassroots Indigenous seed sovereignty movement led by Haudenosaunee women. It offers a glimpse into the challenges facing the world related to food security. It is a powerful view of what is possible in Indigenous communities working towards food sovereignty. Prior to European contact there was a rich and vibrant diversity of foods, with women primarily responsible for caretaking of the seeds. Genocidal practices including, boarding schools, land theft, forced relocation, imposed religion and even food warfare contributed to a disconnection from our traditional foods and seeds. 

Tickets are also available at the City of Cornwall Box office locations or by calling 613-938-9400

Cornwall Aquatic Centre
100 Water St. East, Cornwall
Monday – Friday, 8:30am-4:30pm

Benson Centre
800 Seventh Street West, Cornwall
Monday – Friday, 7:00am-9:00pm

 Please note that Ticketpro service fees do apply. More information is available through the box office or by contacting gm@aultsvilletheatre.com.

Aultsville Theatre Box Office

1 hour before showtime (subject to availability)

The Mohawk Short Film Fest

April 26

7:00 pm