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Archive for June 2nd, 2010

Vivir Latino will be covering the Human Rights Watch International Film Festival, specifically the world premiere of Youth Producing Change series where young media makers from all over the world create and produce messages and share stories important to them! From June 18-19th there will be 11 films featured.

Adobe Youth Voices presents the World premiere of Youth Producing Change, an innovative program of youth-produced short films from across the globe showcased with the Human Rights Watch Film Festival. Eleven films will be shown this year, selected from over 250 international submissions.

All screenings are at Film Society of Lincoln Center Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th Street, Upper Level (Between Broadway and Amsterdam) in NYC. The films are affordable and there are special discounts! For example:

Special Offer: BUY ONE TICKET for $8~ GET ONE FREE
Select the “YPC Special” online and receive a 2nd complimentary ticket at the Walter Reade Theater box office. This offer is subject to availability and only good for the YOUTH PRODUCING CHANGE screenings in the HRWIFF10. For group tickets please email ypc@hrw.org

I’m so excited to be able to see these films. Below is a list and brief synopsis of each film at the festival this year. Are there any specific films you VL readers would love to hear more about?

HANDS OF LOVE:
For David Were and his community in Kibera, the largest slum in Kenya, having access to simple facilities like a bathroom can be a matter of life and death. After a devastating attack on his father, David and his friends know their work to provide security, latrines, and clean-up projects is more than a struggle for a healthier environment —it is part of ensuring the survival of their community. *David Were and Justus Ongera will attend the festival.

KAMRAN’S STORY:
Drawing from a series of dramatic life-changing events, 14-year-old asylum seeker, Kamran, narrates the story of his courageous escape from Afghanistan   and his unaccompanied journey to the United Kingdom. *Kamran Safi will attend the festival.

MIGRATION:
Young people find themselves left on their own when parents are forced to seek work in other countries in order to support their families. Migration provides a new take on immigration, from the perspective of children left behind.

ALIMENTATION D’UN CONGOLAIS MOYEN
(AN AVERAGE CONGOLESE MAN’S DIET):
For 14 years, Congo has been ravaged with conflict. In Congo, food insecurity remains the norm. Millions have died mostly due to malnutrition or lack of access to basic medicine. The simple truth for children in Congo – having a meal isn’t always a given.

17 & UNIDENTIFIED:
Born in Batey Cuchillia, Dominican Republic of Haitian descent, Deivei was never provided with a birth certificate. Without it, he cannot continue his education, find a job, marry or travel. *Filmmaker Alicia Wade will attend the festival.
GROWING UP IN INDIA:
In the northeastern desert state of Rajasthan in India, Sangita feels the limitations of her culture’s caste system when she decides she must forgo an education to train as a dancer in order to support her family.

BABICA:
The Roma people have been the target of persecution and discrimination for   centuries. A Roma grandmother shares her hopes for future generations as she prepares bread with her granddaughter. *Martina Hudorovič will attend the festival.

HUDUD:
Being 16 in the Occupied Palestinian Territories today is to have one’s life dictated by curfews, clashes with soldiers at check points, arbitrary searches and arrests. Hudud (an Arabic word for restriction) illustrates the challenges that Israeli construction of the “separation barrier,” or wall, pose for Palestinian youth.

MARIPOSA:
As Espie prepares for her quinceañera, a traditional rite of passage celebrating a 15-year-old Latina’s debut, her family comes to terms with Espie’s decision to “come out” in a different way. Espie’s story embraces the complexity of family tradition and sexual identity with an honest and brave heart.*Espie Hernandez will attend the festival.

SEE. LISTEN. SPEAK. NGARRINDJERI’S BEING HEARD:
After water is diverted from natural streams and lakes in the rural Coroong community and delivered by pipeline to larger cities, the aboriginal Ngarrindjeri face a disastrous water crisis, threatening their way of life. Ngarrindjeri youth speak out to protect their culture and traditions.

IMAGE OF CONTAMINATION:
The course of Air Force enlistee Diana López’s life changes forever when she learns that toxic waste has been seeping off nearby Kelly Air Force Base and into her community’s ground water. *Elizabeth Gonzalez and Antonio Rodriguez will attend the festival.

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I’ll be the first to admit that I had no interest in seeing the latest Tim Burton film Alice In Wonderland in theaters because I already knew the story. I’m usually more excited to see a film whose storyline I have yet to see before (which is one of the reasons I have some diverse tastes in directors). Plus, after reading ProfSusurro’s amazing review of the film, why even try to write my own review? I mean ProfSusurro even did a two part review where she brought into the convo the SyFy Channel remake!

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Earlier this morning, I wrote about a 72 hour fast that was being supported by some local non-profits and NYC politicos for comprehensive immigration reform and the DREAM Act.

But….

All my sources in D.C. tell me Comprehensive Immigration Reform is dead, so why all the fronting? Why the show for the media and why not support the students who have been risking deportation by putting their undocumented lives on the line through civil disobedience actions? Seems like there is a rift in the struggle. So today, instead of going downtown to where the politicians would be, I went to where the students were, 47th and 3rd Avenue in Midtown Manhattan. There 9 young people are camped out in front of Senator Biometric Chuck Schumer’s office on an indefinite fast demanding that he stop bs’ing and get to stepping on the DREAM Act.

One of the Starving for a DREAM activists, Gabriel Martinez, was nice enough to allow me to sit with him on the sidewalk and speak with me as traffic rushed past.

I will be adding a transcript after the video later.

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My sister, a pre-K teacher in Queens, NYC took her class to a puppet show on safety last week. Her four year old students knew that in case of a fire, they could turn to a firefighter, but when presented with a puppet of a police officer, all the students, responded to the question: “Can you talk to this person?” with a loud, firm “NO!”.

In Queens, NYC, which houses one of the largest and most diverse immigrant populations, children may not understand what SB1070 is or the distance between Roosevelt Ave. and Arizona but they don’t have to. With racial profiling rampant, police interactions rarely are positive. Vendors, a staple on the streets from Jackson Heights to Flushing, complain about how police ticket them relentlessly, even when they have the proper licenses.

That’s why I am glad to see the following event happen within walking distance from Casa Mala.
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Fasting, denying oneself food has been done for spiritual reasons & political reasons. Today, more than 50 immigrant community members, clergy, NY City Council Members and advocates will go on a 72 hour fast to demand comprehensive immigration reform in 2010, among them are Puerto Rican Congresswoman Nydia Velasquez.

The fast is being paired with an education campaign that highlights the contributions immigrants have made to New York City and the United States, and illustrate the need for changes in immigration policy on both a national and local level.

Make the Road NY and New Sanctuary Coalition members will also be conducting a massive community education and outreach effort to engage thousands of community members in the national campaign to pass comprehensive immigration reform, the local campaign to end New York’s collaboration with immigration enforcement at Rikers Island and to repudiate the signing of SB 1070 into law by Arizona Governor Jan Brewer (R-AZ).
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Hola!

VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.

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