Alta (
Finnmark),
Norway -
February 6,
2010
1. Wide shot of fiord
2.
Mid shot of town
4. Mid shot of city centre
5. Mid shot of reindeers being prepared for a race
6.
Various of race
8.
Cutaway to
Sami woman
9. SOUNDBITE: (Sami)
Marianne Eiva Olsen, voxpop
"I am very proud of being a Sami. And today we celebrate our day because we are not able to express ourselves through our language and culture."
Kautokeino,
February 7, 2010
10. Wide shot of village
11. Mid shot of parish church
12. Various shots of village centre
13. Exterior shot of hostel
14. Various shots of hostel owner talking to guest and neighbour
15. SOUNDBITE: (Sami)
Jinga Hermansen
Hatter, owner of local hostel
"
Things have changed so much since my youth. Now communications and infrastructure are modern. And also we have educational centres in the region. Not like in my childhood that I had to travel many miles to go to school."
16. Various shots of hostel owner chatting with reindeer shepherd
17. Mid shot of shepherd leaving hostel
18. Wide shot of car driving through countryside
19. Various shots of shepherd arriving at home
20. Various of shepherd taking care of reindeer
21. SOUNDBITE: (Sami)
Nils Peder Gaup, reindeer shepherd and business entrepreneur
"I am proud of being a Sami.
And I am not worried about the future generations of Sami not choosing to become a shepherd.
Even though they get better education these days we will have reindeer shepherds for the next couple of centuries."
21. Mid shot of shepherd entering home
22. Various shots of children playing computer game
23. SOUNDBITE : (Sami) Isaat Gaup, student
"When I am out of school I spend my time like any other child.
Playing with my computer, playing soccer outside or on top of my snow mobile. But when it comes to my future I want to become a shepherd like my dad."
24. Various shots of youngsters driving their snow mobiles over frozen lake
25. SOUNDBITE: (Sami) , high school student
"When I finish high school I want to move to Alta or
Tromso and become a trained carpenter. We haven''t got a lot of opportunities over here so is better to move to the big cities in the area."
26. Wide shot of
Sami University College
27. Set up shots of
Kamil Ozerk, professor of political science
28. SOUNDBITE: (
English) Kamil Ozerk, professor of political science
"Of course globalisation and maybe Norway''s membership in the
European Union could create some challenges or problems for this indigenous people. Because they are only 40,
000 (Sami) in this country. And there are a total of
100,000 in this area,
Sweden, Finland and
Russia. But
Sami people must be heard and taken in consideration."
29. Wide shot of house
30. Various shots of designer tailor sewing typical Sami dress
31. SOUNDBITE: (Sami) Risten Ravdna Gaup Haetta, tailor
"Fabric designs for our dresses were mainly imported from the rest of
Europe. And the designs they made for us were not exactly our own style. So I started to manufacture my designs locally.
Authentic Sami designs."
32. Various shots of tailor
LEAD IN
The Sami people of Europe''s Arctic have been celebrating their national day.
The once-oppressed indigenous reindeer herders in northern Norway, Sweden, Finland and northwestern Russia began marking February 6 as their national day in
1993.
The date marks the first Sami national congress, when about 100 herders gathered in
Trondheim, Norway, in
1917.
STORYLINE
The Sami country, or
Sapmi, is situated in the cold tundra of northern
Scandinavia.
Their territory comprises of four countries: Norway,
Finland,
Sweden and Russia.
Scientists believe that they descended from the
Komsa people, a prehistoric society that occupied the area as long as nine or ten thousand years ago.
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- published: 24 Jul 2015
- views: 463