In 2017, 78-year-old Christina comes with her son Olle and granddaughter Sanna to a small town in Swedish
Lapland to attend the Sami funeral of her younger sister. Christina, who locals call by her original Sami name, Elle-Marja, does not want to be there. She calls the Sami people thieves and liars, and is disturbed when people speak to her in her first language
Southern Sami. She refuses to spend the night at her late sister's family home and would rather check into a hotel. In the evening Christina remembers her childhood and the events that drove her away from her community. In the 1930s, 14-year-old Elle-Marja's mother is ill. Elle-Marja is sent with her younger sister Njenna to the nomad school, a
boarding school for Sami children where a blonde teacher from
Småland, Christina Lajler, teaches them
Swedish and to know their place. Speaking
Sami, even just among themselves outside of the classroom, results in beatings. Elle-Marja is one of the best students, with a perfect score on her exams and striving to perfect her Swedish. Her teacher encourages her interest in reading and gives her a book of poetry by
Edith Södergran. Elle-Marja feels alienated from the other Sami children, and her feeling of alienation is intensified when scientists from the
Statens institut för rasbiologi (State Institute for Racial Biology) in
Uppsala come to the school to measure the children's heads and take photos of them naked, ignoring their questions about what is going on and disregarding their shame about having to undress in the presence of each other, the teacher and the neighbourhood boys who are allowed to watch through the windows. After threatening a group of these boys with her father's old knife because they called her racist names and slurs, the boys nick the edge of Elle-Marja's ear like the Sami people do with reindeer. She changes out of her
gaeptie and takes one of her teacher's dresses from a clothes line. A group of young soldiers pass her on their way to a dance and Elle-Marja sneaks after them. For a couple of hours she gets to experience how it feels to have the respect of others and be treated with decency by them without question. She dances with a boy called Niklas, who lives in Uppsala, and Elle-Marja makes up her mind that she will leave
Sápmi and go south to Uppsala to study. She tells Niklas that her name is Christina, and does not mention her ethnicity. However, her sister, who has told the school secretary about Elle-Marja's sneaking off, arrives with the secretary and Elle-Marja is forcibly removed from the dance and beaten with a switch. Elle-Marja approaches her teacher and asks if she can get a written recommendation to continue her studies in Uppsala. The teacher informs Elle-Marja that she is 'bright' but that the Sami people lack the sort of intelligence needed for higher studies. She claims that she is needed in northern Sweden or her culture will die out, and Sami supposedly do not adapt well to urban settings. Hearing this, Elle-Marja decides to run away to Uppsala, steals some clothes from a woman on a train, and burns her
gaeptie. She invites herself to stay with Niklas' family. After being reluctantly let into the home for a night and having had sex with Niklas, Niklas' parents ask Elle-Marja to leave, revealing to their son that they know their guest is Sami. Elle-Marja is then forced to sleep outside in the
Botanical Garden. Elle-Marja enrolls in school under the name Christina Lajler. Just as she is beginning to make new friends, she is billed for two semesters of schooling amounting to 200
Swedish krona. Elle-Marja goes back to Niklas' family home in order to borrow the money from him, only to find that Niklas is celebrating his birthday with a party. She is invited to join the party, where a group of university students begin chatting with her, revealing that they know she is Sami by way of Niklas' parents. They force her to
joik for the party-goers. Humiliated, Elle-Marja leaves the party but is approached by Niklas, and she asks him for money. He grows tired of her lies, rebuffs her and is called back into the house by his mother. Unable to pay for school, Elle-Marja is forced to take the train home. Elle-Marja returns to her family but is hostile to them for being Sami. She desires to sell her share of her reindeer in order to pay for her schooling, but her mother rejects this request and tells her daughter to leave. The next morning, Elle-Marja's mother wordlessly gives her daughter the money to continue her schooling in the form of a silver belt that once belonged to Elle-Marja's father. In 2017, Christina utters an apology to her dead sister, Njenna, in South Sami. ==Background ==