Upcoming episode: Global Currents, Nov. 3: Somba Ke – The Money Place

From Global:

“Somba Ke – The Money Place”
Saturday, November 4th at 7 p.m. ET/PT (60 mins.)

Somba Ke: The Money Place takes viewers on a journey to the Canadian Arctic where a uranium mine is at the centre of a worldwide demand for a controversial energy source – nuclear power. The local Sahtu Dene First Nations call the mine “Somba Ke” or “the money place.” Few Canadians know that the Canadian government operated this mine in the 1940s that supplied the United States with uranium for the atomic bombs that leveled Hiroshima and Nagasaki during WWII. Now, that same mine is being re-opened for exploration despite claims by natives that the mine is contaminating sacred land and is the cause of several cancer-related deaths in the community. Directed and produced by Tokyo-based David Henningson, this controversial film uncovers the deadly legacy of Canadians caught between the wave of the future – and the secrets of the past.

About ‘GLOBAL CURRENTS’: Global National’s Kevin Newman hosts this critically acclaimed documentary series committed to revealing extraordinary perspectives and issues affecting all Canadians. Each one-hour, independently-produced documentary represents the talents of Canada’s best socio-political, environmental, humanist and scientific documentary filmmakers.

Other documentaries in the series include:

o DecAIDS: Anything is Possible – November 11
o 100 Days of Freedom – November 18*
o Damage Done: The Drug War Odyssey – December 9*
o The Diaries of Friedrich Kellner – December 16* (new)

* New date
Broadcast schedules are subject to change.

Facebooktwitterredditlinkedinmail

One thought on “Upcoming episode: Global Currents, Nov. 3: Somba Ke – The Money Place”

  1. This is a wide-ranging and thoughtful documentary offering a compelling ‘archaeology’ of this part of the Canadian north. It does a great job of reminding us that nothing happens in a vacuum and that the turn and return to nuclear energy has a history and very real consequences. _Somba Ke_ should be shown widely on a triple bill with _An Inconvenient Truth_ and _The Corporation_, but it has a harder edge than both of these better known films put together. Henningson is a film-maker to watch.

Comments are closed.