The One World 2011 International Human Rights Documentary Film Festival promises to broaden your perspective, inspire activism and even save Liu Xiaobo a seat, should he come by.
From the Himal Southasian team
Himal Southasian’s editor and publisher Kanak Mani Dixit is currently serving on the Grand Jury of the One World 2011 International Human Rights Documentary Film Festival in Prague, Czech Republic. The film festival is up and running for the thirteenth time, and is taking place from 8 to 17 March. The largest human rights film festival in Europe, the programme features 104 documentaries from almost 40 countries. The festival is organized by the Czech NGO ‘People in Need Foundation’, and is intended to give people a better understanding of the world around them. ‘We want people to be more aware of the fact that if they play a more active role in civil society then they take an important step towards becoming part of the solution, rather than simply hardening themselves to the fact that such problems exist,’ Scott Hudson, one of the festival’s programmers, says.
The festival programme is divided into thematic sections, covering human rights-related issues such as corruption in post-communist countries, global warming and gender issues. The films are from such diverse places as Burma, Cuba and Belarus and the festival’s aim is to bring together human rights activists, politicians, filmmakers and film lovers in a communal discussion on ‘the global challenges that the world is wrestling with these days’..
The festival also offers fame and glory in the form of three competitive categories; the Main Competition, the Right to Know and New Media for Social Change. Kanak Mani Dixit, editor of Himal Southasian and Chairman of the Film South Asia Documentary Festival, is to serve on the jury for the Main Competition.
Finally, the Nobel Peace Price-winning Czech Union Leader Vaclav Havel is chairing a special jury which is to award a special prize to a film that stands out in its contribution to the protection of human rights.
Last year’s winner of the Main Competition, Rob Lemkin, who in his ‘Enemies of the People’ persuaded the second-in-command of the Khmer Rouge to speak on the 1970’s Cambodian genocide for the first time, says the 2011 One World Festival aims not only to educate, but also to inspire change: ‘People aren’t just there to appreciate films as films, but to appreciate them as part of the world, and changing the world.’
Attending the Prague Festival will also give you the opportunity to participate in the Festival’s Empty Chair Campaign, this year dedicated to the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize winner, Liu Xiaobo. At every screening, a seat will be kept empty for the imprisoned Chinese dissident. The public is encouraged to write postcards to the Chinese government, demanding his release.
The films will be screened in Prague in addition to 34 other towns and cities across the Czech Republic. Tickets went on sale on Thursday, 3 March.
For more information, log on to http://www.oneworld.cz/2011.
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