A young Tibetan family questions whether their nomadic traditions can survive against the challenges of a rapidly modernizing world. More About A Nomad's Life from Director Lynn True A Nomad's Life was conceived as part of the Kham Film Project, an association of American and Tibetan filmmakers working together to improve the quality and diversity of knowledge about Tibet by engaging Tibetans in the filmmaking process. In making A Nomad's Life, we partnered with Rabsal, a local Tibetan NGO dedicated to using film and multimedia as a means of Tibetan self-representation. Tsering Perlo, the founder of Rabsal and an emerging documentary filmmaker himself, is a principal collaborator on the project. Perlo grew up in the nomadic community depicted in A Nomad's Life and he provided rare access to this place seldom seen by outsiders. Historically, Tibetan nomads have thrived in an extreme environment where few other humans dared to live. Until China's occupation of Tibet in 1959, the basic patterns of life had changed little since the first nomads domesticated the yak and took to the pastures over 8,000 years ago. But now, unprecedented challenges are confronting this traditional lifestyle. A Nomad's Life captures the struggles of a young nomadic family as their pastoral way of life is threatened by a fast-approaching globalization. The film follows the family of Locho, Yama and their infant daughter (whom they call "Jiatomah" - loosely translated as "spiky brown-haired baby") who spend the summer in the pastures of Jomtod Valley in Tibet's Kham region 15,000 feet above sea level. The Chinese call this region "Wu-Zui" or "5 Most" for its reputation as the highest, coldest, poorest, largest and most remote area in Kham. Neither crops nor trees grow here; only hearty alpine grass sustains the family's herd of yaks - the treasured animals that enable Locho and Yama to carve an existence from one of the harshest habitable environments on earth. Environmental degradation has thinned the grasslands and modernization has begun to reveal alluring alternatives to the struggles of maintaining a yak herd. In response, many families have left the pasture for permanent settlement. As Locho and Yama contemplate their future as nomads, they find themselves caught between a deep attachment to the life they know and love, and intense uncertainty over what will be best for little Jiatomah as she grows up in contemporary Tibet. We completed photography for A Nomad's Life in September 2007 when Locho and Yama were moving from summer pasture to fall pasture. Their next move was to a semi-permanent mud-brick dwelling near town where they spend the cold mid-winter months. In the Spring of 2008 they returned to pasture, right around the time when their little girl had her first birthday. We returned to New York in the fall of 2007 with over 200 hours of footage from our summer living with Locho and Yama. Over the next 2 1/2 years, we worked on translating the material and editing the feature length version of the film. SUMMER PASTURE has was finally completed in March, 2010 and it will have its world premiere at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival in April of 2010. For more information, please visit: www.summerpasturefilm.com.
1. Where does these nomads live and what is that area like?
2. How did this nomad group become a family?
3. What do Yaks provide these nomads?
4. What are some changes in the world that this family discusses in the film?
5. How does the mother of the family feel about the life of a nomad? Does she want this for her children?
6. Why do you think the filmmakers decided to make this film?
SnagLearning is dedicated to presenting high-quality documentary films as educational tools to ignite meaningful discussion within the learning community.