After the movie ask your questions to executive producer Raven Sinclair and writer and director, Roz Owen.
Trouble in the Garden is an award winning film and is the story of an estranged family caught in the aftermath of the '60s scoop. Bailed out and taken in by a brother she hasn't seen in years, an Indigenous protester and her adoptive family reckon with betrayal of love, land, and blood. After watching the movie discuss it with executive producer Raven Sinclair and writer and director, Roz Owen. Sinclair (Ótiskewápíwskew) is Cree/Assinniboine/Saulteaux from Gordon’s First Nation and Associate Professor of Social Work at the University of Regina and the Assistant Director of the Indigenous Peoples’ Health Research Centre. Owen is an award-winning, Toronto-based writer-director and film production teacher at Image Arts at The Creative School. To register, email smitchell@dahac.ca or call 905-544-4320 x 254.
AGE GROUP: | Older Adults | Adults (18+) |
EVENT TYPE: | Movies | Arts & Culture |
TAGS: | Orange Shirt Day | National Day for Truth and Reconciliation | Movies | In-Branch |
The first Hamilton Public Library building opened on September 16, 1890 by the Earl and Countess of Aberdeen on the north side of Main Street West. In 1913, a new main library opened. This building was replaced in 1980 by Central Library, at the current location on York Boulevard.
In 2010, Central Library re-opened after approximately 18 months of renovations. Central Library opened with a newly revitalized first floor, which includes a Community Living Room that takes advantage of natural light. The Ontario Library Association honoured Central in 2012 with an Architectural and Design Transformation award.