Techqua Ikachi, Land - My Life

Techqua Ikachi, Land – My Life is a feature documentary by Swiss/German director Anka Schmid, the Swiss artist Agnes Barmettler and the Hopi Native American James Danaqyumptewa from 1989.

[1] The documentary consists of current and historical shots alike and is being complemented by sketches and drawings of Swiss artist Agnes Barmettler.

Explanatory commentary is being omitted deliberately, instead the shots are being strung together to a whole by the narration of eldest of Hótevilla, a village in Arizona.

The eldest of the village pass on the history of their peoples, talking about the nonviolent resistance against the land expropriation at the beginning of the 20th century and about the American authorities’ paternalism, due to which the natives’ traditions and way of life are being suppressed.

[2] About 1986/87 the then 70 year old Hopi Native American James Danaqyumptewa (alias Jimmy Kootshongsi, 1916-1996) invited the young film student Anka Schmid and the Swiss painter Agnes Barmettler to his Hopi-village in the United States in order for them to document the way of life, legends and traditions of the Hopi tribe.