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Howe Sound grad’s play tackles aboriginal issues

Giffen’s play is being read this Saturday at Eagle Eye Theatre
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During her senior year, Howe Sound Secondary student Ashleigh Giffen wrote a script that was chosen for the Arts Club Theatre’s playwriting mentorship program.

One of her hopes was that she could have it performed in Squamish, and this Saturday that will happen, with a reading of the play, KamWatan Nipe (Quiet Water), at the Eagle Eye Theatre.

The play is set in 1998 in Saskatchewan, when an aboriginal teenager, Kimberly Francis, is abducted by several men, raped and thrown in the local river while walking home from her restaurant job.

The case is investigated briefly but abandoned. Eighteen years later, a journalist named Michael Bayton is assigned to do a story on missing and murdered aboriginal women, following the latest Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report.

He interviews Kimberly’s family, friends and community members who are still trying to cope with her murder.

Through these interviews, Michael meets Kimberly the way her family describes her passions and good nature.

“This is a fictional story, but it is based on many, many stories,” said school district principal for aboriginal education Susan Leslie, who helped arrange the reading.

Last fall, Giffen applied to the Arts Club Theatre’s Learning Early About Playwriting (LEAP) program and was accepted after sending in a sample of her writing and a submission on why she wanted to take the program.

Through the process, she workshopped her script with other students and a mentor.

“We talked a lot about race and the story about race with the mainstream media,” Giffen said.

As part of the LEAP process, there was a reading in the spring.

“It’ll be the same actors as the Vancouver reading,” she added.

One thing she wanted to ensure was that she could work with aboriginal actors to read the aboriginal roles.

Along with the Arts Club, Giffen credits Leslie for helping make the reading happen at her old school.

Leslie, though, does not want to take the credit for the event.

“This is purely Ashleigh’s initiative,” she said. “I’m really excited to be able to support Ashleigh’s work.”

Such initiative allowed Giffen to work on the script as well as get ready for graduation and be involved with other projects such as Sea to Sky Aboriginal Youth Leadership’s 24-Hour Drum event in the spring.

Leslie thinks the play will be a great inspiration to aboriginal leadership students returning to class this fall.
“It will be a wonderful way to start off a year,” she said. “We want all students to feel like they have a voice.”

Although Giffen is moving to start school at UBC Okanagan to study indigenous studies, she will be back in town for this weekend’s reading.

The reading for KamWatan Nipe (Quiet Water) will take place on Sept. 10 at 7 p.m. Donations will be taken at the door.

Note: The play contains graphic content and may not be suitable for children.

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