Washington:
Academy Award winning actor and producer Leonardo Dickaprio has worked with filmmaker Shannon King on the upcoming documentary Nine small IndiansWhich highlights the rigorous story of misuse at an American boarding school for original American children.
The documentary, currently in post-production, follows the nearly two-decade long legal battle of Charbonue Sisters and his childhood schoolmates who misused the terrible misuse at St. Paul Indian Mission School in South Dakota.
According to the deadline, the film will revolutionary to the Catholic Church to justify the heinous crimes imposed on them.
Dickaprio’s production company, Apian Way, Red Queen Media and Terra Mater Studio are producing the documentary.
The film features two former nuns and Mathadhish in the school, who oversee several of the priests accused of rape and murder.
Filmmaker King, is known for her documentary ‘and the Line: The Woman of Standing Rock’, began working on the project in 2016, when tribal members invited her to document the discovery of skeletal remains of the missing children in the school.
According to the deadline, the documentary aims to highlight the dark history of American Indian boarding schools, which were established to “decent” the original American children in the Anglo-American culture.
Institutions have been linked to many cases of misconduct, rape and murder.
Writer and public speaker Tony Robins has joined the project as an executive manufacturer, as well as Dicaprio and other notable producers.
“We are happy to partner with Tony Robins and Shannon King on this intense film, which highlights the arrogant crimes at St. Paul Indian Mission School,” Jennifer Davisson said, “The appellate way in the appeal way, the chairman of the production, remedies the deadline.”
King said, “This is the time that we make atonement for this terror of this disaster past as a nation.”
Robins remarked, “I hope that ‘Nine Little Indians’ inspires you as much as St. Paul’s Indian Mission School has inspired me.”
(Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by NDTV employees and is published by a syndicated feed.)