The Town of Wolfville has partnered with Acadia University to provide an Indigenous Film Mawio'mi.
Multiple documentary films will be screened between September 28 and October 4. All films will be screened in the K.C. Irving Centre Auditorium and all will be free of charge.
All community members are invited to watch these documentaries; to learn from and better understand indigenous experience and perspective.
A message from organizers:
We invite you to join us at the first-ever Indigenous Film Mawio’mi at Acadia University, a student-led initiative dedicated to advancing the journey toward reconciliation.
From Sunday, September 28, 2025, through Saturday, October 4, 2025, we will host nightly screenings of Indigenous films and documentaries in the KCIC Auditorium. Each evening offers an opportunity to engage with stories that reflect the voices, experiences, and resilience of Indigenous peoples.
Our Mawio’mi will conclude on Saturday, October 4, at 2:00 p.m., coinciding with Sisters in Spirit Day, with a special screening of Finding Dawn at the Beveridge Arts Centre. This powerful film shines a light on the ongoing crisis of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Children in Canada.
There is no cost to attend. However, as part of our commitment to community, Politics students will be collecting donations of new, unused socks in support of the Mi’kmaq Native Friendship Centre and its outreach to our unhoused community members. We encourage all attendees to contribute if they are able.
This public event has been made possible through partnership with the AcadiaU Welkaqnik Indigenous Gathering Space, the Town of Wolfville, Acadia University, Acadia programs and departments—Community Development, Nutrition and Dietetics, Politics, Sociology, Women & Gender Studies—and the Vaughn Memorial Library.
Everyone is welcome and all the film screenings are free.