A new 54-minute documentary film will tell the story of how families from four different southwestern tribes came together to live as one entity, the Colorado River Indian Tribes (CRIT), and how a Japanese-American internment camp played a role in how it all happened. The film is set to premiere in Parker, AZ next week.

In Our Voice: The Chemehuevi, Hopi and Navajo Perspectives was commissioned by the CRIT Tribal Council to complete the origin story told in 2015’s The Marking of a Milestone, which is about the Mohave tribe and the founding of the reservation in 1865.

In a continuation of the story, the new film relates how Chemehuevi people came to live with the Mohaves at the reservation’s founding, and how a mid-20th century colonization program allowed members of other tribes to join CRIT, including members of the Hopi and Navajo tribes from northeastern Arizona.

Navajos and Hopis moved into barracks at the Poston Internment Camp while Japanese-Americans were still interned there at the end of World War II. The film features elders who remember the move, what it was like, and the challenges and experiences of being immigrants in a new land. One such elder, 97 year-old Charlotte Byestewa, tells the filmmakers she moved with 10 of her family and distinctly remembers the Japanese-Americans as being “very nice people”.

The film also compares the experiences of those of Japanese ancestry who were forced into internment camps and the experiences of Native Americans who were forced onto reservations, with one Navajo CRIT member’s emotional recollection that his parents were told they must stop speaking the Navajo language to their children. That interviewee’s father was a renowned Navajo Code Talker during the war, helping the Allies to communicate using the Navajo language and thus win the war.

Ultimately, despite the adversity of these families, the four tribes have lived together as one geopolitical unit since the 1940s. Today, the Colorado River Indian Tribes celebrate the diversity of its culture and their ability to survive in the southwestern desert despite innate challenges.

The film was produced by Jux Films, which also produced two earlier films for the Tribes, The Marking of a Milestone (2015) and Beyond All Boundaries: Our Land, Our Water (2016).

The new documentary will be shown for the first time at a free screening at BlueWater Cinemas in Parker, open to the public, on Thursday, March 1st at 7pm. The two previous films will be screened beforehand, beginning at 5pm.