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Third annual South Asian Human Rights Film Festival announced
Syracuse
University will present the third annual South Asian Human
Rights Film Festival, beginning April 1. The festival is
a joint project of the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications,
the South Asia Center at the Daniel Patrick Moynihan Institute
of Global Affairs in The Maxwell School of Citizenship and
Public Affairs, the Asia Society and Breakthrough.
The
three-day festival will showcase a series of dynamic, full-length
feature films and documentaries by well-known directors
and independent filmmakers from India, Pakistan, Nepal,
Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and the South Asian diaspora, focusing
on issues including regional conflict, HIV/AIDS, violence
against women and the plight of indigenous people.
SU faculty members,
experts and the films’ directors will lead post-screening
discussions. All screenings are free and open to the public.
April 1-2 screenings will take place in Shemin Auditorium,
located in the Shaffer Art Building on the SU campus. Free
parking will be available in the Q4 lot. The April 3 screening
will take place at Westcott Cinema, 524 Westcott St., Syracuse.
April 1 at 6
p.m., Dinaz Stafford, director of the festival’s first
film, “Still, the Children are Here,” will attend
the screening of her feature-length documentary about the
plight of the Garos people of Meghalaya, an indigenous tribe
in northeast India, and the impact of modern society on
their lifestyle.
Two
hour-long documentaries will be screened on April 2 beginning
at noon. Munizae Jahangir’s “Search for Freedom,”
explores the lives of four Afghan women in Pakistan, and
Pervez Hoodboy and Zia Mian’s “Crossing the
Lines” tells the story of injustice and violence in
the Kashmir conflict. These will be followed at 2:30 p.m.
by Rituparno Ghosh’s “Chokher Bali: A Passion
Play,” starring Aishwarya Rai, dubbed “the most
beautiful woman in the world” by U.S. actress Julia
Roberts.It tells the story of a beautiful, educated and
vivacious young widow set against the backdrop of political
resistance during the Bengal partition in the early 1900’s.
Director Sabiha
Sumar will attend the 6 p.m. screening of her award-winning
“Khamosh Pani (Silent Waters),” about violence
against women set in 1979 Pakistan, when General Zia-ul-Haq
took control of the country and stoked the fires of Islamic
nationalism.
April
3 at 11:30 a.m., the first Bollywood film dealing with HIV/AIDS,
Revathy Menon’s “Phir Milenge (We'll Meet Again)”
will be shown at Westcott Cinema. The story of a young,
successful career woman who loses her job due to her HIV
status, the film explores the subtleties of human relations.
“The
film festival continues to enrich scholarship in anthropology,sociology,
history, geography, women’s studies, international
relations, social work, film studies and communications,
“ says event organizer, Newhouse professor and filmmaker
Tula Goenka. “More importantly, it informs viewers
about important issues in the international arena, particularly
in the region of South Asia, as well as deepening understanding
of domestic social issues including religion, sexuality,
globalization and human rights.”
For more information, contact Goenka at (315) 443-3376 or
Radha Ganesan at
(315) 443-4998.
The film festival
is part of “University as Public Good: Exploring the
Soul of Syracuse,” the yearlong exploration designated
by Chancellor Nancy Cantor.
The event is
funded by the Division of Student Affairs' UEncounter Program
and The Kaleidoscope Project, a diversity initiative between
the divisions of Undergraduate Studies and Student Affairs
to broaden the understanding of diversity and promote healthy
dialogue about related issues at SU.