This article mainly discusses the possibilities of the visual construction of minority history, particularly focusing on the historiophoty of the Kalewan Battle. It argues that Indigenous Peoples and ethnic minorities have begun to undergo a range of media efforts in order to reshape their self-imagination and to reconstruct the history that has been erased or distorted by mainstream society. Through the collective participation, the Kalewan and Sakizaya people could use the screen media, such as film, video, and television, to recuperate their own stories of the Kalewan Battle. The practice of retelling history in visual form, therefore, would strengthen the cultural identity and historical memory among Indigenous Peoples.