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Center for Genocide Research and Education Announces Film Festival on April 15

The Center for Genocide Research And Education is hosting their first annual film festival on April 15 from 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. The films will be shown at the Visual Arts Complex on the CU Boulder campus.
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Photo from Center of Genocide Research and Education website

This content was originally published by the Longmont Observer and is licensed under a Creative Commons license.

The Center for Genocide Research And Education is hosting their first annual film festival on April 15 from 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. The films will be shown at the Visual Arts Complex on the CU Boulder campus.

Discounted tickets can be purchased by visiting the Center for Genocide Research and Education's website. Tickets can be purchased for individual films or for an all day pass. Access to the speaker panel is given with each ticket purchase.

"The festival will highlight women's resilience and resistance during and after genocide," state the Center for Genocide Research and Education's website.

The following films, along with descriptions, will be shown:

Calling the Ghosts: A Story About Rape, War and Women - 10:30 AM

An extraordinarily powerful documentary, CALLING THE GHOSTS is the first-person account of two women caught in a war where rape was as much an everyday weapon as bullets or bombs. Jadranka Cigelj and Nusreta Sivac, childhood friends and lawyers, enjoyed the lives of "ordinary modern women" in Bosnia-Herzegovina until one day former neighbors became tormentors. Taken to the notorious Serb concentration camp of Omarska, the two women, like other Muslim and Croat women interned there, were systematically tortured and humiliated by their Serb captors.

Once released, the pair turned personal struggles for survival into a larger fight for justice-aiding other women similarly brutalized and successfully lobbying to have rape included in the international lexicon of war crimes by the UN Tribunal at the Hague. Chronicling the two women's experience and their remarkable transformation, CALLING THE GHOSTS is an indispensable resource for deepening understanding of human rights abuses and combating violence against women in the global arena.

**Emmy award winner for Best Documentary and Directing

Daring to Resist: Three Women Face the Holocaust - 12:00 PM

Why would a young person choose resistance rather than submission during Hitler's reign of terror while her world was collapsing around her? In this gripping documentary, three Jewish women answer this question by recalling their lives as teenagers in occupied Holland, Hungary and Poland, when they refused to remain passive as the Nazis rounded up local Jewish populations. Defying her family's wishes, each girl found an unexpected way of fighting back--as a ballet dancer shuttling Jews to safe houses and distributing resistance newspapers; as a photographer and partisan waging guerrilla war against the Germans; and as a leader in an underground Zionist group smuggling Jews across the border. Enriched by home movies, archival footage, and previously unpublished photographs, the women's varied and vibrant stories provide a unique look at Jewish resistance to Nazism, a subject all too often consigned to history's footnotes.

Duhozanye: A Rwandan Village of Widows - 1:15 PM

During the 1994 genocidal campaign that claimed the lives of an estimated 800,000 Rwandans and committed atrocities against countless others, Daphrose Mukarutamu, a Tutsi, lost her husband and all but two of her 11 children. In the aftermath she considered suicide. But instead, she took in 20 orphans and started Duhozanye, an association of Tutsi and Hutu widows who were married to Tutsi men. This powerful documentary by award-winning Norwegian director Karoline Frogner recounts the story of Duhozanye’s formation and growth - from a support group of neighbors who share their traumatic experiences, rebuild their homes, and collect and bury their dead, to an expanding member-driven network that advances the empowerment of Rwandan women. Featuring first-person accounts by Daphrose and other Duhozanye widows, the film shows association members helping women victims of rape and HIV/AIDS, running small businesses and classes in gender violence prevention, and taking part in national reconciliation through open-air people’s courts where they can face, and often forgive, their loved ones’ killers.

God Sleeps in Rwanda - 2:30 PM

Uncovering amazing stories of hope in the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide, Academy Award-Nominee GOD SLEEPS IN RWANDA captures the spirit of five courageous women as they rebuild their lives, redefine women’s roles in Rwandan society and bring hope to a wounded nation.

The 1994 Rwandan Genocide left the country nearly 70 percent female, handing Rwanda’s women an extraordinary burden and an unprecedented opportunity. Girls are attending school in record numbers, and women now make up a large part of the country’s leadership. Working with two cameras and no crew except for their translator—a genocide survivor herself—the filmmakers uncover incredible stories: an HIV-positive policewoman raising four children alone and attending night school to become a lawyer, a teenager who has become head of household for her four siblings, and a young woman orphaned in her teens who is now the top development official in her area. Heart-wrenching and inspiring, this powerful film is a brutal reminder of the consequences of the Rwandan tragedy, and a tribute to the strength and spirit of those who are moving forth.

**Emmy winner for Best Documentary and Academy Award nominee for Best Documentary Short

Sisters in Resistance - 3:15 PM

“This compelling documentary shares the story of four French women of uncommon courage who, in their teens and twenties, risked their lives to fight the Nazi occupation of their country. Neither Jews nor Communists, they were in no danger of arrest before they joined the Resistance. They could have remained safe at home. But they chose to resist. Within two years all four were arrested by the Gestapo and deported as political prisoners to the hell of Ravensbruck concentration camp, where they helped one another survive. Today, elderly but still very active, they continue to push forward as social activists and intellectual leaders in their fields. The film captures their amazing lives, and reveals an uncommon, intense bond of friendship that survives to this day.” - Human Rights Watch International Film Festival.

Speaker Panel - 4:20 PM

Arthur Gilbert – Associate Professor at the Josef Korbel School of International Studies

Christi Yoder – Executive Director of the Center for Genocide Research and Education

*Note: The list for the speaker panel was not finalized when this article was published.

The Center of Genocide Research and Education is a nonprofit in Longmont, CO. To learn more about the Center of Genocide Research and Education please visit their website at http://www.genocideresearch.org/ or contact Executive Director, Christi Yoder via email.



Macie May

About the Author: Macie May

Macie May has built her career in community journalism serving local Colorado communities since 2017.
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