Archive for the 'film' Category

Movies for a better world

As already  announced, the International Social Action Film Festival took place in Berlin on October 11th.  In spite of the gorgeous weather and a huge rally advocating stronger data protection that came marching along Wilhelmstrasse right at the festival venue, a small but highly committed group of spectators came to see the many movies on human rights and social entrepreneurship and to discuss with the representatives of organizations, directors and journalists.

Berlin as a pilot project

The (short) films shown in the Social Entrepreneurship section, some of which had been financed and selected for the festival by the Skoll Foundation, will also be shown all over the world on February 9th, 2009.  The Berlin festival was a sort of pilot project for this first event, which will take place simultaneously at different venues in different cities of the world.  All movies focus on the work done by selected social entrepreneurs – people who have identified a social, ecological or cultural emergency and who are trying to remedy it using whatever means they have available.  The film festival intends to showcase the impressive work they do, and often very effectively.

Fantastic organizations!

Of the eleven shorts shown in the Social Entrepreneurship section, I was particularly impressed by the movie on Youthbuild. This is a US organization that works with young people and drop-outs living in ghettos in renovating vacant, derelict buildings in their neighborhood.  But the young people build much more: their self-esteem, for one thing, and they learn specific, practical and organizational skills in various crafts. The organization International Bridges to Justice founded by Karen Tse impressed me no end (recently, the American Bar Association recognized her work by the International Human Rights Award).  Strengthening legal structures in autocratic countries (and not only there) is one of the very important fields for social change in these nations, in addition to education.

“Too much mousse au chocolat”

The initiatives and their backers that were presented in the short movies we saw are extremely impressive.  I could go on and on, about CIDA from South Africa and the Renascer Child Health Organisation, whose work with mothers in children in the terribly poor North-Eastern part of Brazil reminded me of one of the most moving books I have ever read (Nancy Scheper-Hughes, Death Without Weeping).  But after eleven of these movies, I understood what Renate sitting next to me was saying with her comment, “I have the same feeling now that I get after too much of a good mousse au chocolat”.

True, the movies showed committed, effective organizations that could be a role model for all of us.  But if I want to truly believe in a project, the movie presenting it has got to be more than just an image campaign. Eleven films and not a single rough edge anywhere, social change as one long triumphal procession of success.  Yes, I know, it’s important to show people that something has worked well.  But I would have appreciated insights into the obstacles, the setbacks and the contradictions that I know inevitably come with this type of work.

Sponsorship of the unglamorous kind

The chaos of real life was the focus of the two movies by Petra Dilthey and Uli Schwarz.  In their film “3 Kinder, 2 Paten und ein Baby” (Three children, two sponsors and a baby” (which can be found here, as can many other films by UP-Productions), the directors from Munich documented their experience as the sponsors of three Indian children living in Vijayawada (Andhra Pradesh), a project that is promoted and organized by the sponsorship organization Care&Share. Sponsorships are one of the most popular forms of developmental aid by private citizens – we at betterplace assist a number of functioning, small and larger organizations such as the Azioni “Niños Felices” in the Dominican Republic.  In the first half year alone, Germany saw € 100 million transferred to sponsorship organizations (source: GfK Charity Scope).  After my children were born, I also became a sponsor for two children with Plan International, if only to introduce my kids to the circumstances in which children in other cultures grow up.

For three years, Petra Dilthey and Uli Schwarz have been visiting the children they sponsor; in their film, they provide us with differentiated and credible insights into the “help” they give.  Thus, one of the children receiving their support seems to have moved out since quite a long time.  The boy does show up when they come to visit and is given great support by his sponsors for his schooling.  But at their return the following year, they see that they have been disappointed in their expectations: the boy is to be found on the soccer field much more frequently than in school.

What is the conclusion drawn by this carefully researched and self-reflective study?  In spite of their expectations having been disappointed, and notwithstanding individual cases of mismanagement, the sponsors / directors support the organization and in fact have founded a German association in the summer of 2008 to promote Care&Share, so that the organization has an even stronger support base. Because even if help is characterized, like any other intervention, by contradictions and obstacles, the positive aspects govern for all concerned: extremely disadvantaged children are given schooling, a stable environment and thus, a new sense of self-esteem.

In closing, one final sentence about War/Dance, the movie about child soldiers in the North of Uganda, which closed the festival: go see it or watch it at home.  It is a fantastic movie and will be available on DVD next month.

International Social Action Film Festival

 

We are very proud to present you the First International Social Action Film Festival in Berlin – 11th of October at Humboldt Viadrina School of Governance, Wilhelmstraße 67.

Brought to you by the SocialDesignSite, Project Humboldt-Viadrina School of Governance and betterplace in collaboration with ISAFF.

The International Social Action Film Festival Day is a powerful combination of the talent of filmmakers to tell a compelling story and the crucial work of social action organizations and individuals around the world solving pressing social problems.

A key to the sustainability of any successful social action organization is its ability to communicate its story to the largest possible audience.

The International Social Action Film Festival will provide that access.

From an illegal game of volleyball to the Grameen Bank
The movies presented ranged from the world’s most illegal game of volleyball, to the use of forced labour in Burma and to the most positive social change such as microcredits and the Grameen Bank. 

This Festival is a compilation of international short movies mainly held in English, including 2 German movies “Drei Kinder, 2 Paten und 1 Baby” and “Wie Jothi dem Teufelskreis aus Armut und Prostitution entkommt” proudly presented by Petra Dilthey and Uli Schwarz from Care & Share. 

The day will be divided in three sessions, starting with a selection of short movies – aiming at creating awareness on the topics of human rights and displaced people. The next session focuses on social entrepreuneurship, offering alternatives for improving society in all areas of life through businesses, banking, health…

At the end of each screenings, you will be invited to discuss the topics with invited experts and film makers.

WAR/DANCE
The day will end with the feature length movie WAR/DANCE (Oscar nominated, 15 winning awards, including the Sundance Film Festival best documentary 2007); telling the story of ex-children soldiers in Uganda and their way out through dance and music.

We want to focus on social actions, exploring possibilities and solutions. The festival aims at illustrating the capability for each and every individual to take any action for social change. We invite you to be part of the change and make this festival a successful event we will hopefully see growning in the future.

Tickets (6 Euros, Day ticket: 15 Euros) are available for purchase here.

Go here for more information.

Polar Bears make great activists

Over the weekend, two different environmental campaigns caught my attention; both involving Polar Bears:

Last Friday,  Action Forward, a Dutch collective, raised this statue in the city of Den Bosch. The statue is made out of tyres and portraits a Polar Bear who throws a oil barrel to the passing cars. The Netherlands counts almost 8 million cars, responsible for more than 20% of the greenhouse gases. That’s why this Polar Bear can’t stand it any longer, he is angry. 

 

Also, enjoy this subtle video – Polar Bear guerilla – Subway (thanks Moritz for pointing me to it) 

Burma: The real disaster

It’s absurd: On the one hand, cyclone Nargis that devastated Burma served as destraction from the fact that the people of Burma have been suffering from oppression and hunger for a long time. On the other hand, it’s a grim reminder of how bad things really are in the country tyrannised by its military regime. London-based NGO The Burma Campaign UK works with that ambiguity. Watch this cool yet serious animated film that’s accompanying the campaign:

As cruel as nature has been to the Burmese people, what happened to them for decades under military rule is even worse. Villages destroyed, millions displaced, the poor starving. That was everyday life in Burma before the Cyclone. In a country where rape is used as a weapon of war, thousands are forced into slavery and dissent can mean death, its people cannot speak out. But you can.

They come in the name of helping

Last night I saw “They come in the name of helping”, a film (coming to me via Global Giving. The film originally appeared in Peter Deitzs blog about micro-philanthropy, which features individuals, organisations and platforms using Web 2.0 applications to enable micro-donations and social change) by 22 year old Political Science student Peter Brock. Shot in Sierra Leone, the second poorest country in the world, it portrays young students voicing their views about development aid.

It took quite some time to load, but the authentic voices are worth the wait.

Roots~Where do flowers come from?

A reader of the betterplace blog in German commented on From Kenya with love – and left the link to this great film. Thank you!



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