Main

June 06, 2008

"OTHER, OTHER…" screening and panel at Hostos Art Gallery

I'll be speaking on a panel of recipients of the Urban Artist Initiative Grant (UAI/NYC) on Friday (see panel titled in bold below). Twenty minutes of rough scenes from Enemy Alien will be on view at the exhibit, which runs most of the summer.
-- Konrad

The Bronx Council on the Arts and Longwood Art Gallery @ Hostos proudly present:

OTHER, OTHER…
Curated by Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz
On view at Longwood Art Gallery from June 4 thru August 7, 2008 Hostos Center for the Arts & Culture
450 Grand Concourse at 149th Street
2, 4 5 trains and Bx1, Bx19 buses to 149th Street/Grand Concourse

Wednesday, June 4 from 5-9pm
Opening Reception and Bronx Culture Trolley

Friday, June 6
6:00pm – 8:00pm
The Importance of Intermediaries and Panelists in the Urban Artist Initiative process UAI Artists, Panelist and Representatives from the UAI coordinating committee will discuss the grantsmanship process, challenges and recommendations. Panel: Konrad Aderer, Alván Colón, Duron Jackson, Linda Walton. Moderator: Ted Berger

Saturday, June 7th, 2008
12:00 – 1:30pm - The Big Picture: The Changing Demographics of NYC – Impact on Culture -This panel will discuss recent and present demographic studies that provide a new perspective on the way the city will look in the future. It will discuss how these changes are reflected in the work of artists and the implications such changes present for the creative community and the broader community. Panel: Dr. Yasmin Ramirez, Tomie Arai, Dr.Anna Magonson, Omar Freilla. Moderator: Kinshsha Conwill.

1:45-3:15pm – Diversity and Class Within Diversity–Increasing demographic changes within diverse communities add to the complexities of understanding and recognizing the range of ethnicities and cultures. What are the implications for the arts community? Panel: Wallace Edgecombe, Juan Sanchez and Dread Scott. Moderator: Ron Kavanaugh.

3:30 – 5:00pm – Implications for Cultural and Public Policy – This panel will highlight ways cultural and public policy presently responds to changing demographics and suggest ways of responding in the future. It will also discuss our collective responsibility to work towards chance in public policy. Panel: Rocio Alvarez-Aranda, Kinshasha Conwill, Heather Hilzharno. Moderator: William Aguado.

5:30-7:00pm – Reception at the Longwood Art Gallery.

7:00pm- Performance at Hostos Performing Arts Center – Celebrando LaTorva Boricua – A salute to the 51st National Puerto Rican Day Parade and to the city of Lajas, Puerto Rico with Victoria Sanabria “La diosa de la trova” and Prodigio Clausdio, Maestro del cuatro. Admission $15. Box office and information: 718-518-4455

OTHER, OTHER…features works by 18 artists of African, Asian, and Latino ancestry working in drawing, installation, mixed media, painting, performance art, photography, sculpture and video, and represent a sampling of 2007 and 2008 Urban Artist Initiative Grant (UAI/NYC) recipients visual arts and media.

Participating artists Konrad Aderer, Karina Aguilera-Skvirsky, Keith Anderson, Tomie Arai, Cat Chow, Nicolás Dumit Estévez, Edwin Gonzalez-Ojeda, Skowmon Hastanan, Wennie Huang, Janelle Iglesias, Duron Jackson, Teru Kuwayama, Jessica Lagunas, Alfonso Muñoz, Juan Sanchez, Dread Scott, Shen Wei, and Injoo Whang

OTHER, OTHER… refers to the varying degrees of “Otherness” that artists of color reflect within the issues of multilayered representations (or misrepresentations), classification of identity and visibility.

Sponsored for Hostos Center for the Arts & Culture and The Bronx Council on the Arts

This exhibition is made possible with funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, New York State Council on the Arts-Visual Arts Program, AG Foundation and Carnegie Corporation

Free Admission

www.bronxarts.org
www.longwoodarts.org

Hostos Center for the Arts & Culture
450 Grand Concourse at 149th Street
2, 4 5 trains and Bx1, Bx19 buses to 149th Street/Grand Concourse
Bronx, NY 10451
Information: 718.518.4455

March 02, 2008

Rising Up: the Alams screening at NYC Grassroots Media Conference

Alisha

Rising Up: The Alams
11 min | Konrad Aderer | 2005
In this short documentary we meet the Alams, a Bangladeshi family living in Coney Island, Brooklyn. Mohammed Alam, father to two young U.S.-born daughters, is one of 13,000 immigrants facing deportation as a consequence of Special Registration, a post-9/11 policy which targeted nationals of Muslim countries. But the Alams are not just victims. Learn how they fight back as members of South Asian community organization D.R.U.M. (Desis Rising Up and Moving).

My short documentary RISING UP: THE ALAMS is showing at the Grassroots Media Conference this Sunday at 12:15pm, Hunter College.

It's not just a screening but a whole conference, with tons of events & screenings going on. NYC folks interested in media & activism should check this out! I'll be speaking with a panel following the screening.

5th Annual Grassroots Media Conference
http://www.nycgrassrootsmedia.org
Speaking Truth To Power- Media Justice in Our Communities
Co-Sponsored by the Film and Media Studies Department, Hunter College/CUNY

Sunday March 2, 9am-6pm
at HUNTER COLLEGE:
68th Street and Lexington Ave
Enter at West Building (Southwest Corner, enter from street or directly from 6 train)

For Directions and Handicap access please visit:
http://nycgrassrootsmedia.org/08directions

Session 2: 12:15pm - 1:45pm

CALL FOR CHANGE SERIES: PRESENTED BY THIRD WORLD NEWSREEL
Call for Change is a vibrant series of short documentaries about various communities of color in New York City. Each documentary opens a window into a different aspect of life in the city: a Palestinian-American voting for the first time; Sikhs defending their civil rights to wear turbans and practice their religion; a Bangladeshi family fighting against deportation; domestic workers demanding better working conditions, and more.

*Q&A With The Following Filmmakers to Follow:

Kevin Lee, Filmmaker
Konrad Aderer, Filmmaker
Miriam Perez, Filmmaker
Neha Singh, Advocacy Director / Staff Attorney, The Sikh Coalition
Wanda Imueson, FUREE

here’s a list of the other Call for Change films:

JUST RALPH
11min | Clifton Watson | 2005

WORK & RESPECT
10 min | Domestic Workers United | 2005

SHE RHYMES LIKE A GIRL
7 min | JT Takagi | 2005

WALKING WITH FUREE
10 min | Miriam Perez | 2005

DASTAAR: DEFENDING SIKH IDENTITY
12 min | Kevin Lee| 2005

there’s more screening programs too; here's the full schedule:
http://nycgrassrootsmedia.org/sites/nycgrassrootsmedia.org/files/FilmSched08_4.pdf

REGISTER TODAY to save $10 off conference registration!
Your last chance to register at the pre-conference rate will be Friday at 5pm. Visit or stop by our ticketing locations:

Downtown:
Bluestockings Bookstore
172 Allen Street between Stanton and Rivington :: 212.777.6028

Brooklyn:
VOX POP CAFE
1022 Cortelyou Road 718.940.2084

Registration Rates:

$20 adults advance/$30 day of
$15/$25 student registration with valid ID
$10 Hunter Students with valid ID
$5 youth (18 and under)

GROUP RATES AVAILABLE! Please email mo@nycgrassrootsmedia.org or call 917.523.1045

| | TrackBacks (0)

August 16, 2007

Rising Up: The Alams at MNN's Digital Garden Summer

MNN's digital Garden Summer presents

Rising Up: the Alams & Walking with FUREE

August 16, 8pm
Roosevelt Park
E. Houston Street to Canal Street
NYC
Free

August 01, 2007

OUT OF STATUS premiere at Pioneer Theater

This is the work of two very dedicated young filmmakers I first met back in 2003. Their feature will be running at the Pioneer Theater.
-- Konrad

Since 2003 Sanjna and I have worked on "Out of Status" -- a film documenting the lives of 4 families changed forever when immigration policies were enforced selectively after 9/11.

The film's finally being released in NY in a theater for at least one week. Run begins August 1, 2007.

August 1-7
Two Boots Pioneer Theater
155 East 3rd Street (between Avenues A and B)
NYC

Come take a look. For tix visit the Pioneer theater website at: http://twoboots.com/pioneer/#OutOfStatus

For more on the film -- visit http://www.outofstatus.com. And don't forget to buy your tickets in advance!

July 27, 2007

July 27 FRI, July 28 SAT: Dialogues on Immigration

Two Dialogues on Immigration
Friday July 27 in New York City
Saturday July 28 in Montclair, NJ
(see below for details)

Join us for a participatory dialogue on immigration, with the authors of the newly released book from Monthly Review Press, "The Politics of Immigration: Questions and Answers," Jane Guskin and David Wilson.

The dialogues aim to encourage a deeper and broader look at the realities and causes of immigration, and to discuss possible courses of action.

Have you heard an anti-immigrant argument that you feel is wrong, but need the facts to contest? (For example: "Immigrants are a drain on social services.") Do you have your own fear or concern about the issue? (For example: "Are the lowest-paid US-born workers really hurt by immigration? ") Bring these arguments and concerns to the dialogue, and we'll work together to develop responses using facts, rational reasoning and personal experiences.

"The Politics of Immigration: Questions and Answers" will be available for purchase at both events, signed by the authors, at a discounted price of $10. David Wilson and Jane Guskin have been co-editors since 1990 of Weekly News Update on the Americas, a weekly bulletin covering news from Latin America. Guskin also edits Immigration News Briefs. Both have been active for over a decade in support of the immigrant rights and workers' justice movements.

Friday, July 27, 2007, 7 pm

"Responding to Immigration Concerns: A Participatory Dialogue"

At A.J. Muste Room
339 Lafayette Street, buzzer 11
New York, NY (at Bleecker Street, take the 6 train to Bleecker
Street or B/D/F/V to Broadway-Lafayette)

Free. Sponsored by Weekly News Update and Immigration News Briefs.
For more information, call 212-674-9499 or write
thepoliticsofimmigration*at*gmail.com

Saturday, July 28, 2007, 2:30 pm

"Dialogue on the Politics of Immigration"
Moderated by Greg Pason of Residents Against Racism.

At Montclair Public Library Auditorium
50 South Fullerton Ave
Montclair, NJ

Free and open to the public

Sponsored by Residents Against Racism-New Jersey For more information and directions, call Greg Pason at 201-803-7574, write RAR at info*at*residentsagainstracism.net or visit http://residentsagainstracism.net/july28immigrationdialog.html

THE POLITICS OF IMMIGRATION
Questions and Answers

by Jane Guskin and David Wilson

"We desperately need to put aside false information about immigrants, to see them as we see ourselves with honesty and compassion. This book gives powerful meaning to the slogan 'No Human Being is Illegal.' I hope it will be widely read."
- Howard Zinn, author of A People's History of the United States
"As the immigrant rights movement grows in size and energy, we need quick facts and deep history. This book gives us both."
- Aarti Shahani, co-director, Families for Freedom
"Guskin and Wilson have identified the hot-button points in the national immigration debate, and have set out to undo the stereotypes, misinformation and prejudice that paralyze rational thought on the subject. This book is a great reality check, a good teaching tool, and a powerful weapon against racism."

- David Bacon, author of Communities Without Borders: Images and Voices from the World of Migration

To order the book, call 800-670-9499 or visit:
http://monthlyreview.org/politicsof immigration.htm

June 15, 2007

Rising Up: the Alams screening at the IRC Baltimore for World Refugee Day

Alisha

Friday, June 15
8pm
The International Rescue Committee (IRC) in Baltimore
3516 Eastern Avenue
Baltimore
Maryland 21224
United States
Tel: 410-327-1885

On Wednesday, June 20, 2007, the International Rescue Committee celebrates World Refugee Day, established by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) as an annual salute to the courage, resilience and strength of refugees.

Jun 15 - "Voices of Refuge" Film Screening and Panel Discussion: The IRC and Por la Avenida will screen the documentaries "Rising Up: The Alams" and "On One Field: Patterson Park." IRC vice president of resettlement Bob Carey and Dr. Courtland Robinson of Johns Hopkins, which produced the controversial Iraqi death toll study, will co-host a panel discussion on refugees and displacement. There will also be traditional Iranian music and Burundian a capella performances, plus light fare and a cash bar.

Rising Up: The Alams

Documentary, 11 minutes, MiniDV

director/DP: Konrad Aderer

In this short documentary we meet the Alams, a Bangladeshi family living in Coney Island, Brooklyn. Mohammed Alam, father to two young U.S.-born daughters, is one of 13,000 immigrants facing deportation as a consequence of Special Registration, a post-9/11 policy which targeted nationals of Muslim countries. But the Alams are not just victims. Learn how they fight back as members of South Asian community organization D.R.U.M. (Desis Rising Up and Moving).

Rising Up: The Alams was produced as part of the non-profit media project Life or Liberty, as part of Third World Newsreel's Call For Change series.

August 25, 2006

A CORNER OF HER EYE in Williamsburg

A Corner of Her Eye
MiniDV, 23 minutes
Produced & edited by Konrad Aderer

When three brothers hole up in their father's house to weather Hurricane Katrina, they take it on as a challenge. This is an intimate and spooky family portrait that starts as a fun adventure and ends as a disaster barely averted.

this short is being shown by Rooftop Films, with the program:


Watch trailer for "A Corner of Her Eye"

Home Movies
Traces of lives, captured and collected.
admission $8.00
Info/tickets

The online box office will close between 5 and 6 PM on the day of the show after which time tickets may be purchased at the door.

Friday, August 25th, 2006
8:30 - Live Music
9:00 - Showtime
TRT: 1:38:35

On the lawn of Automotive High School
50 Bedford Ave, between N. 12th and Lorimer, Williamsburg, Brooklyn
In the event of rain the show is indoors at the same location.

Directions:

Just a few blocks north of the main drag and directly across Bedford Ave from McCarren Park. Enter at the BACK of the school, on Nassau Street. Shows are held on the lawn just north of the school. Picnics are encouraged. In the event of rain, shows are held indoors, in the school's beautiful auditorium.

by TRAIN L to Bedford Avenue: exit at the Bedford Avenue side of the train, at N. 7th Street. Walk north. Automotive High School is the only building past the schoolyard at North 12th Street, on the left side of the street.

G to Nassau Avenue: Exit at the Nassau side of the train, at Nassau and Manhattan Aves. Walk south, toward McCarren Park. Nassau merges with Bedford Avenue at Lorimer Street, one block away. Cross Lorimer, and Automotive is the big brick building on your right.

July 21, 2006

Vigil Commemorating the Life of Farouk Abdel-Muhti

NYC, 7/21: Remembering Farouk

[Please distribute widely. Note that WBAI will have a special on the Middle on Monday, 7/17/06, 7 pm to midnight; there will be a segment with Sharin Chiorazzo at 11 pm.]

"،Farouk Vive! ،La Lucha Sigue!"
Vigil Commemorating the Life of Farouk Abdel-Muhti

Friday, July 21, 2006, noon to 1 PM

At the Federal Building, 26 Federal Plaza
Broadway at Worth Street
(Take the 4/5/6 or N/R to City Hall, or the A/C/E to Chambers St)

New York-based Palestinian activist Farouk Abdel-Muhti died suddenly of a heart attack on July 21, 2004, three weeks before his 57th birthday and 100 days after he was released from immigration detention. Federal agents and New York City police arrested Farouk in April 2002, just as he was beginning to work as a producer of segments on Palestine at New York's WBAI-FM. The US government then held him in a series of county and federal facilities for nearly two years--in clear violation of his constitutional rights--and refused to release him until ordered to do so by a federal district judge.

Now, as Israeli renews its assaults against Gaza and Lebanon, we need to remember Farouk's lifelong struggle for peace with justice and for the rights of Palestinians, of immigrants and of workers everywhere. Join us in front of the Federal Building, where we vigiled for Farouk's release each Friday at noon, to rededicate ourselves to carrying on his work.

Remember Farouk, and call for a free Palestine. Demand an end to US-backed Israeli violence in Gaza & Lebanon. ،Hasta la victoria siempre!

Speakers to be announced. For more information and to endorse: call 212-674-9499 or email freefarouk@yahoo.com

=========================================================
Committee for the Release of Farouk Abdel-Muhti
PO Box 20587, Tompkins Square Station, New York, NY 10009
Phone: 212-674-9499 * Email freefarouk@yahoo.com
Website: freefarouk.netfirms.com
=========================================================

July 15, 2006

RISING UP: THE ALAMS at Asian American International Festival

Alisha

Rising Up: The Alams

Documentary, 11 minutes, MiniDV

director/DP: Konrad Aderer

In this short documentary we meet the Alams, a Bangladeshi family living in Coney Island, Brooklyn. Mohammed Alam, father to two young U.S.-born daughters, is one of 13,000 immigrants facing deportation as a consequence of Special Registration, a post-9/11 policy which targeted nationals of Muslim countries. But the Alams are not just victims. Learn how they fight back as members of South Asian community organization D.R.U.M. (Desis Rising Up and Moving).

Rising Up: The Alams was produced as part of the non-profit media project Life or Liberty, as part of Third World Newsreel's Call For Change series.

RISING UP: THE ALAMS
In program:
THE MISEDUCATION OF SUZY WONG
SATURDAY, JULY 15, 8PM
ROSE HALL
THE ASIA SOCIETY
725 PARK AVENUE @ 70TH STREET, NYC

And

MONDAY, JULY 17, 3:30PM
QUAD CINEMA
34 WEST 13TH STREET @ 6TH AVENUE, NYC

There will be a talkback with the filmmakers after the Saturday, July 15 screening.

info and tickets:

http://www.aaiff.org

April 20, 2006

Rising Up: the Alams at the 1st Asian American Film Festival in Hong Kong

Alisha

First Asian American Film Festival
Friday, April 20, 2007
7 p.m
D Hall, MUST
The Hong Kong America Center
Chung Chi College
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Shatin N.T., Hong Kong SAR China

Rising Up: The Alams

Documentary, 11 minutes, MiniDV

director/DP: Konrad Aderer

In this short documentary we meet the Alams, a Bangladeshi family living in Coney Island, Brooklyn. Mohammed Alam, father to two young U.S.-born daughters, is one of 13,000 immigrants facing deportation as a consequence of Special Registration, a post-9/11 policy which targeted nationals of Muslim countries. But the Alams are not just victims. Learn how they fight back as members of South Asian community organization D.R.U.M. (Desis Rising Up and Moving).

Rising Up: The Alams was produced as part of the non-profit media project Life or Liberty, as part of Third World Newsreel's Call For Change series.

A PANEL DISCUSSION ON IMMIGRANT AND POLITICAL DETENTION

Asian American Arts Centre presents:

A PANEL DISCUSSION ON IMMIGRANT AND POLITICAL DETENTION

with:
Konrad Aderer
(filmmaker focusing on detention and deportation)
Adem Carroll (Islamic Center of North America)
Monami Maulik (Desis Rising Up and Moving)
Visible Collective/Disappeared in America.org

Thursday, April 20th at 6 pm

Asian American Arts Centre
26 Bowery, 3rd floor, NYC
(between Pell and Bayard. Red door to the left of McDonald’s)

212-233-2154
http://artspiral.org

March 24, 2006

Rising Up: The Alams in Philadelphia

Philadelphia Premiere

Third World Newreel's
Call for Change Project
Series Producer J.T. Takagi in person

God Bless America2
Saj: Muslim in America
Just Ralph
Fulton & Franklin
Rising Up: The Alams
Work and Respect

Friday, March 24
7:00 PM
International House
3710 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia
Admission: $10, free for Scribe members

For over 38 years, Third World Newsreel has worked with socially conscious mediamakers and communities of color to bring a range of voices into the national discussion of American priorities. A call went out in spring 2004 to filmmakers, often working with artists and community organizations, to produce short videos presenting the views of underrepresented New York City communities and their state of America. The resulting video shorts in a Call for Change, produced under the aegis of coordinating producer JT Takagi, give voice to the concerns of immigrant, low-income groups and communities of color often marginalized or silenced, particularly in this period of diminishing civil liberties. In one evening of short documentaries you will hear the stories of South Asian families in DRUM (Desis Rising Up and Moving) fighting deportation resulting from homeland security policies, nannies and housekeepers of Domestic Workers United fighting for a bill of rights, and activists working to get New York City to pass a bill requiring any companies doing business with the city to reveal any past relationship with the slave trade. There is spoken word, a documentary about women rappers and intimate portraits of immigrants, post 9/11. Call for Change premiered at the Brooklyn Rose Cinemas and is featured in the Museum of Modern Arts' Documentary Fortnight in February 2006. Third World Newsreel produces, distributes over 400 titles, and trains in film and digital video. A new Call for Change series will be produced starting summer 2006.

Preceded by Color Conscious
Director: Cheraine Stanford
2005, US, video, 3 mins

This experimental short takes the images and emotions evoked by the colors of the Jamaican and American flags to question dual identities, stereotypes and civil liberty abuses faced by immigrants in the U.S.

Join J.T. Takagi for a Master Class
Saturday, March 25 from 11:00 AM - 1:00 PM at Scribe.

February 26, 2006

RISING UP... at PRISONER’S JUSTICE FILM FESTIVAL 2006

PRISONER’S JUSTICE FILM FESTIVAL 2006

Toronto's Prisoner's Justice Action Committee presents
The Second Annual
Prisoner's Justice Film Festival
February 23-26, 2006

This event is generously supported by the Social Justice Cluster,
University of Toronto

The first Toronto Prisoner's Justice Film Festival was held in January of
2005 and drew hundreds of community members, abolitionists, youths,
activists, students, educators, artists, ex-prisoners, family members and
allies from across Ontario. This year's festival will build on the first,
as we work to build a movement that challenges the prison-industrial
complex, and demands justice, not jails.

Join us for an exciting selection of informative films including Canadian,
U.S., and international submissions. Films will be accompanied by guest
panels including current and ex-prisoners, families of prisoners,
activists and advocates, film-makers, researchers and writers. Audiences
will be encouraged to join in the discussion. Between films, participants
will have the chance to enjoy musical performances, take in displays of
prisoners' art, and check out ally organizations at our community info
fair.

Thursday February 23, 2006 6-9.30pm
Friday February 24, 2006 7pm to late
Saturday February 25, 2006 12noon-10pm
Sunday February 26, 2005 2-9.30pm

All film screenings at Innis Town Hall - University of Toronto
Located at the corner of Sussex Ave and St. George St.

Friday Party at the Multipurpose Room, Student Campus Center
Ryerson University, 55 Gould St.

Festival Schedule

Thursday, February 23rd

6:00 – 9:30pm Health in Prison
Opening with Manitou Kwe Singers (Women Spirit Singers)
Manitou Kwe Singers (Women Spirit Singers), founded in 1995 by Amber
O'Hara (Waabnong Kwe) is an all women's hand drum group. All members of
Manitou Kwe Singers are of Native ancestry. Herstorically, they have sung
for the missing or murdered women in Canada, for prisoners, justice and
against violence in general.

Exceptional People’s Olympiad
(Canada, 2000, 15min, Big House Productions/CBC)

This film was shot and produced by a film production group inside Collins
Bay Federal Jail near Kingston. This film highlights the annual weekend
Olympics for athletes with disabilities organized and paid for by
prisoners at Collins Bay. This film highlights some of the relationships
that have developed over the course of this event. An interesting
snap-shot of two communities so often made invisible by our society.

Prison Lullabies (USA, 2003, 83min, Brown Hats Productions)
Dirs: Odile Isralson, Lina Matta

Prison Lullabies is the remarkable portrait of four women living on the
bad side of luck, struggling with drug addiction, arrested for dealing and
prostitution, and serving prison time with one common bond – arrested
pregnant, Amy, Monique, Joann, and Anne Marie have all given birth behind
bars. One of only five prisons in the U.S. to provide a nursery program
for inmates, Taconic Correctional Facility in New York State allows the
women to keep their babies for the first 18 months of their lives while
insisting that the mothers participate in a rigorous series of classes
that range from basic child care to anger management and drug counseling.
Each woman is released in the course of filming. Each must choose, minute
to minute, whether to find a job, break the cycle of relapse and re-arrest
that has led to the loss of her other children, or pick up the crack pipe,
abandon the child, and return to the streets. Shot in cinema-verité style,
Prison Lullabies addresses these issues by allowing the audience the
opportunity to observe and listen as the stories of the inmate mothers
unfold in their own time and in their own words. Prison Lullabies is an
extraordinary tale – that of four women making life-altering choices and
seizing the glimmer of possibility the prison nursery program is holding
out for them and for the future of their children.

Q&A with
Ayden Scheim, prison activist
Psychiatric survivor, OCAB Speakers Bureau


Friday, February 24th
7:00pm "LYRICIST LINKUP 6: Poetik Justice"
Presented by 8 Rooks Enlightenment & I.S.I.S. CIRCLE ENTERTAINMENT

Ryerson University Multi-Purpose Room (Student Campus Centre), 55 Gould St.

Hosted by Soul-R & EvE! Featuring Spin, Lady Loxx, Leviathan, Jah Paul &
Elisha, Blak Child, EvE, Soul-R and El Machetero

Open-Mic! Cultural Catering! Vendor's Market!

Sponsors: Ryerson Students' Union, Big It Up International, Lite It Up
Candles, Dogon Star Productions
Music: DJ El Machetero
Contact: 8Rooks.Com

Saturday, February 25th

12:00 - 2:00pm Networking Forum

An opportunity to share information about what various individuals and
groups are currently doing in the area of prisoners’ justice activism –
both for new folks who want to get involved, and for folks who are already
involved but want to build stronger connections. Come and identify
networking /collective support needs for prisoner’s justice activists and
to brainstorm ideas for keeping each better connected. Explore the
possibility of forming a radical prison workers network and discuss ideas
around organizing a prisoner’s justice week and/or other actions which
will help build collective solidarity in the prison abolition movement.


2:00 - 5:00pm Youth Incarceration

Juvies (USA, 2004, 66 min, Chance Films Inc.)
Dirs: Leslie Neale

From award-winning documentary filmmaker Leslie Neale (Road to Return)
comes this riveting look at a world most of us will never see: the world
of juvenile offenders who are serving incredible prison sentences for
crimes they either did not commit or were only marginally involved in. For
two years, Neale taught a video production class at Los Angeles Central
Juvenile Hall to 12 young people who were all being tried as adults.
Juvies is the product of that class, which was a learning experience for
both students and teacher - and becomes a learning experience for all of
us, as
we witness the heartbreaking stories of children abandoned by families and
a system that has disintegrated into a kind of vending machine justice.
Narrated by actor Mark Wahlberg, himself a former juvenile offender, and
poetry read by Mos Def.

Sun Up ‘till Sun Down (USA, 2005, 22 min, Prison Moratorium Project)
Dir. Tania Cuevas

A lively documentary produced by the Prison Moratorium Project about their
campaign against the construction of youth prisons and the growing
movement in New York to end imprisonment. Imaginative techniques of
conveying the startling reality of the prison industry make this film
engaging as well as informative.

Performances by
Spin, spoken word artist, community organizer
Toronto Underground Street Journalist Mr. Bones

Q&A with
Veronica Salvatierra, Community Youth Worker, St Stephen’s Community House
Lee Ann Chapman, B.A. LL.B, staff lawyer at Justice for Children and Youth.
Jagjeet Chhabra, 81 Reasons Campaign
Representative, Black Youth Taking Action


5:00 - 7:15pm Women Political Prisoners of the Middle East

Women in Death Castles (Palestine, 2004,13min)
Dir: Balata Film Collective

A high proportion of Palestinian women prisoners in Israeli Occupation
prisons are from the Nablus region. In this film, recently released women
from Balata and Nablus speak out about their pain and struggle while
imprisoned. Testimonies describe interrogation, physical and mental
torture, loneliness. The film Includes interviews with ex-prisoners,
children of current prisoners and officials from the Prisoners’ Society.

Red Names (Canada,1999, 12min)
Dirs: Amin Zarghami, Shahrzad Arshadi

This is a short video celebrating the legacy of thousands of women who
lost their lives in Iran between 1979 and 1999 due to their political,
social and religious beliefs. For Amin Zarghami & Shahrzad Arshadi,
working on this video was an opportunity to pay tribute to the memory of
these women - some of whom they knew personally - and grieve their loss.
It is intended as a testament both to their suffering and to the political
tyranny that led to their execution.

Women in Struggle (Palestine, 2004, 56min)
Dir: Buthina Canaan Khoury

This film documents the lives of Palestinian women who are ex-political
detainees, depicting their struggle during years of imprisonment in
Israeli jails and exploring the effect on their present-day life. The film
focuses on the lives of four women who became involved in the Palestinian
national struggle for independence. The women testify in their own words
about their histories, and about daily life in the current Palestinian
Intifada at a time of the “war on terror” and the apartheid wall. The film
seeks to understand the women’s efforts to preserve their dignity and
integrate into Palestinian social and political life. Although these four
women are no longer physically incarcerated, they actually find themselves
in a bigger prison carrying their imprisonment within them in every aspect
of their life.

Q&A with
Shahrzad Mojab, Director, Women and Gender Studies Institute, University
of Toronto
Shahrzad Arshadi, filmmaker
Rafeef Ziadeh, Sumoud


Performance by Faith Nolan, singer-songwriter, blues guitarist and prison
activist http://www.faithnolan.org


7:30 - 10:00 Resistance Caged (Political Prisoners)

Mission Against Terror (Cuba/Ireland, 2004, 48 min, Canal Education and
Two Islands Productions)
Dirs: Bernie Dwyer, Roberto Ruiz Rebo

As Havana wakes up to another day, five Cuban men are serving their time
in prisons scattered throughout the United States. Their crime? Protecting
their country and people against terrorism. Arrested on Sept. 12, 1998 and
subjected to a trial, which US civil rights lawyer, Leonard Weinglass,
calls a "violation" from start to finish, the Cuban five were locked away
for a total of three life sentences plus 68 years. There are very few
cases that are political by their nature. This was one. "Mission Against
Terror" charts Cuba's 45-year struggle against terrorism and the five
men's fight to win justice.

Souha Surviving Hell (Lebanon, 2001, 60min)
Dir: Randa Chahal Sabbag

From the director of Civilisees, which opened the 2000 Human Rights Watch
International Film Festival and received its Nestor Almendros Prize, Randa
Chahal Sabbag now turns her lens on South Lebanon. The subject of Chahal
Sabbag's film is the charismatic Souha Becharre, whom many call the
"fiance du Liban." In 1989 at the age of twenty-one, Souha - a devoted
communist - agreed to attempt the assassination of Lebanese General
Antoine Lahad, who was collaborating with the Israeli Army in the South of
Lebanon. Lahad survived, but Souha was quickly arrested and thrown in the
Khiam prison where she spent ten years for the attempt on Lahad's life.
Conditions in Khiam were horrific, and Souha endured six of those years in
solitary confinement. Chahal Sabbag follows Souha in the months following
her release, as she tirelessly travels Lebanon - speaking about her
experiences at Khiam and searching out others who were imprisoned there.
And despite all she suffered in Khiam, Souha is a survivor who shares her
story with a sense of hope for the future - both her own and that of
Lebanon.

Q&A with
Representative from Sumoud Political Prisoners Solidarity Group.
Tom Keefer - Seth Hayes Support Committee, Autonomy & Solidarity
Morteza Gorgzadeh, Toronto Forum on Cuba
Patrick Elie, Former Secretary of State for National Defense, Haiti,
President of Foundation Eko Vwa Jan Dominique

Sunday, February 26th

2:00 - 4:00pm Immigration Detention and the Secret Trials

Rising Up: the Alams (USA, 2005, 12min)
Dir: Konrad Aderer

An immigrant family, the Alams, are picked up during the special
registration program in the United States after 911. Faced with removal to
persecution they decided to resist with the revolutionary organization -
Desis Rising Up and Moving, a South Asian working class organization.

Don't Ask Don't Tell (Canada, 2005, 11min)
Dirs: Jean McDonald and Alex Rotalski

Approximately 200,000 non-status immigrants who live in Canada face
deportation and detention. Women abused by the spouse cannot call police,
lesbian couples are refused community housing. In Toronto immigrant
communities are fighting back. This film documents their struggle.

Whose Rights, Anyway? Justice for Mohammed (Canada, 2005, 23 min)
Dir: Anice Wong

Provides public information about the security-certificates process by
highlighting the case of Mohamed Harkat who has been in detention in
Ottawa for over 18 months.

L'echo du Silence (Echo Of Silence) (Canada, 2003, 23 min)
Dir: Chloe Germain-Therien

In 1997 two Basque men, Gorka Perea and Eduardo Plagaro, sought refugee
status in Canada after being charged with arson in Spain. They claimed
that their confessions to the crime were signed under torture. In 2001 the
two men were detained as suspected terrorists in a prison in Rivière des
Prairies, Quebec. The Echo of Silence documents their experience in
Canada: their detention, their temporary release, and finally their
extradition in June 2005, despite an active grassroots movement to keep
them in Canada.

Q&A with
Chloe Germain-Therien, film-maker
Mac Scott - No One is Illegal
Sima Zerehi - Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell
Matthew Behrens - Toronto Action for Social Change
Family members - Friends and Family of Gary Freeman


4:30 - 6:30 The Politics of Prison

Torture Inc - America’s Brutal Prisons (UK, 2005, 24 min)
Dir: Deborah Davies

Savaged by dogs, Electrocuted With Cattle Prods, Burned By Toxic
Chemicals, Does such barbaric abuse inside U.S. jails explain the horrors
that were committed in Iraq? They are just some of the victims of
wholesale torture taking place inside the U.S. prison system that we
uncovered during a four-month investigation for the UK’s Channel 4. It’s
terrible to watch some of the videos and realise that you’re not only
seeing torture in action but, in the most extreme cases, you are
witnessing young men dying.

This Black Soil - A Story of Resistance and Rebirth (USA, 2004, 58 min,
Working Hands Productions)
Dir: Teresa Konechne

This inspiring and provocative new film chronicles the successful struggle
of Bayview, Virginia, a small and severely impoverished rural
African-American community, to pursue a new vision of prosperity.
Catalyzed by the defeat of a state plan to build a maximum-security prison
in their backyard, the powerful women leaders and residents created the
Bayview Citizens for Social Justice, a non-profit organization, secured
$10 million in grants, purchased the proposed prison site land and are now
building a new community from the ground up. Under the leadership of
visionary women, this new rural village challenges all conventional ideas
of community development and includes not only improved and affordable
housing, but a sustainable economic base to earn a living wage, a
community center for educating its residents, a daycare center,
laundromat, and a community farm, which not only provides jobs and income
for the organization, but returns them to their roots, working on the
land.

Q&A with
Julia Sudbury, Canada Research Chair in Social Justice, Equity and
Diversity, University of Toronto
Rai Reece, PJAC
Giselle Dias


7:00 - 9:00 Indigenous and First Nations Prisoners

The Heart Has Its Own Memory (Canada, 2005, 13 minutes)
Dir: Audrey Huntley

This short film looks at violence against First Nations Women in Canada,
the lack of justice for missing Aboriginal women and racist police
inaction and impunity. Huntley creates a collage of the women’s stories
and interviews with family members and friends. The film plays with native
oratory and is a testimony to the pain and grief of the community as a
whole and a message of no more silence.

To Heal The Spirit (Canada, 1991, 47 min)
Why Not Productions Inc.

An emotionally charged documentary that focuses on First Nations women in
prison and the way in which many women discover spirituality and gain a
sense of identity within the oppressive confines of prison walls.

My Name is Kahentiiosta (Canada, 1995, 30 min)
Dir: Alanis Obomsawin

This affecting film profiles a young, courageous Kahnawake Mohawk woman
who was arrested after a 78 day armed standoff in 1990 between the Mohawks
and the Canadian federal government. Kahentiiosta is detained four days
longer than other women because the court refuses to accept her aboriginal
name. This is a compelling look at a people’s movement for
self-determination and one young woman’s refusal to capitulate in the face
of great adversity.

Q&A with
Jonathan Rudin, Aboriginal Legal Services of Toronto
Chief Leo Friday, Kashechewan First Nations
Representative from No More Silence
Amber O'Hara (Waabnong Kwe)

9:00pm: Closing Ceremony with Musical Guests


How to get there:
All Film Screenings at Innis Town Hall - University of Toronto, 2 Sussex
Avenue. Corner of Sussex Ave and St. George Street, just south of Bloor
Street.
5 minute walk from St. George Station.

Friday Party at the Multipurpose Room, Student Campus Center, Ryerson
University, 55 Gould St, Near Yonge and Gerrard.
5 minute walk from Dundas Station.

All film programmes $5 suggested donation.
Friday night pay-what-you-can $5-$10. This is an all-ages event and all
venues are wheelchair accessible.

About the Prisoner's Justice Action Committee:

The Prisoner's Justice Action Committee believes that prisons do not make
our communities safer or more secure. We believe that the prison
industrial complex perpetuates violence and oppression, including racism,
classism, sexism, colonialism, and homophobia. PJAC works to end
incarceration and detention and to create healthy communities built on
social justice.

Please contact us with your questions, comments or ideas.

Pjac_committee@yahoo.com

Visit our website: http://www.pjac.org

Many thanks to our sponsors

CKLN 88.1fm
Criminology Department, University of Toronto
Defense for Children International, Canada
Equity Studies Department, University of Toronto
Faculty of Nursing, University of Toronto
John Howard Society Toronto
Ontario Public Interest Research Group, York University
Prisoner's HIV/AIDS Support Action Network
Sexual Diversity Studies Program, University of Toronto
Social Justice Cluster, University of Toronto
Toronto Forum on Cuba
Trans Identified/Woman Identified Caucus, CUPE 3903, York University
Women and Gender Studies Institute, University of Toronto
Women Political Prisoners of the Middle East Project (Shahrzad Mojab)

Endorsers

81 Reasons Campaign
8Rook Productions
Aboriginal Legal Services of Toronto
Al-Awda Right of Return Coalition (Toronto)
BIFA, Bath Penitentiary
Black Action Defense Committee
Black Inmates and Friends Assembly
Buried Alive Illustrations
Campaign to Stop Secret Trials in Canada
CKLN
Coalition to Stop the War Toronto
Colours of Resistance - York University
Friends and Family Gary Freeman
Gavel Club, Bath Penitentiary
Isis Entertainment
Justice for Children and Youth
Justice for Mohamed Harkat Committee
Lifers Group, Bath Penitentiary
Lifers Group, Joyceville Penitentiary
Lifting as We Climb
Native Brotherhood, Bath Penitentiary
No One Is Illegal
Ontario Coalition Against Poverty
Prison Talk Online
Resistance on the Sound Dial
Rittenhouse
Satan Macnuggit
St. Clare's Multifaith Housing Society
Strength in SISterhood
Sumoud
Toronto Action for Social Change
Toronto Don't Ask Don't Tell Campaign
Womyn4justice - Kingston
Words Action Resistance

February 20, 2006

RISING UP: THE ALAMS at MoMA Documentary Fortnight

Alisha

MOMA DOCUMENTARY FORTNIGHT SCHEDULE for CALL FOR CHANGE SERIES

Location:
All screenings will take place in The Museum of Modern Art s Roy and Niuta Titus Theaters. The MoMA s address is 11 West 53rd Street / New York, NY / 10019

Getting to the MoMA:
Subway: E or V to Fifth Avenue/53 Street; B, D, or F to 47-50 Streets/Rockefeller Center.
Bus: M1, 2, 3, 4, 5 to 53 Street. (For more detailed directions, please see http://www.moma.org/visit_moma/directions.html)

Monday, February 20

6:00 pm
Third World Newsreel: Call for Change [part 1]. 2005. USA.
The activist media group Third World Newsreel has produced a series of shorts on national issues and on New York City's communities of color. Program includes:

Rising Up: The Alams, on a Bangladeshi family fighting the post-9/11 anti-immigrant crackdown;
Saj: Muslim in America, on a Muslim woman living in New York;
Dastar: Defending Sikh Identity, on job discrimination against Sikhs;
Among the First to Die, on Guatamalan immigrants in the Marines;
Just Ralph, on a Palestinian immigrant; and Work and Respect, on organizing domestic workers.

Program 69 min. New York premiere.
(Introduced by Dorothy Thigpen from Third World Newsreel, and the directors).

8:30 p.m.
Third World Newsreel: Call for Change [part 2]. 2005. USA.
Untold Legacy, on reparations for slavery;
Latino Poets Speak Out, a series of performance pieces;
Fulton and Franklin, on police bag searches;
Voices in the Street, on security at the Republican National Convention;
Military Option, on the military recruitment of high schoolers;
Military Promises, on mental health in the military;
She Rhymes Like a Girl, on Black women rappers;
Walking with FUREE, on demonstrations by Welfare recipients.

Program 75 min. New York premiere.
(Introduced by Thigpen and the directors).

January 25, 2006

After Katrina: Solidarity Not Charity, Reclaiming the Gulf

The Socialist Party National Office invites you to join us at a forum:

After Katrina: Solidarity Not Charity, Reclaiming the Gulf

Wednesday January 25, 2006 6:30 - 9 PM

Screening:

A Corner of Her Eye
MiniDV, 18 minutes

An intimate and spooky portrait of three brothers visiting their father in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi who take on Hurricane Katrina as a fun challenge and find themselves fighting for their lives.

Watch trailer

with a report on New Orleans from
the Common Ground Collective

A national dialogue on racism, poverty inequality and injustice began after Katrina hit the Gulf Coast. While FEMA and the Red Cross failed at providing immediate support for Gulf "refugees", community-led projects like the Common Ground Collective have continued the work of rebuilding the Gulf offering mutual aid and support from volunteer medical and health providers, aid workers, community organizers, legal representatives and people from all over with broad skills from all walks of life.

Speakers:
Sean White: volunteer with the Common Ground Collective. Sean has been at the Common Ground Collective since September and will have a slide presentation on the Common Ground Project. Sean is an anti-authoritarian/ anti-capitalist activist and organizer and a member of the Socialist Party.

Konrad Aderer: documentarian and producer of Life or Liberty, Farouk Abdel-Muhti: Political Prisoner and other human rights films. Konrad has a short video of Katrina and will speak about his experience during the hurricane. A ten-minute excerpt will be shown from his documentary A Corner of Her Eye.

Others Speakers TBA

Moderated by Greg Pason, National Secretary Socialist Party USA

339 LAFAYETTE ST. (buzzer #11) MANHATTAN, NYC
(corner of Bleecker & Lafayette Sts.)
Info: gpason@... or
212-982-4586

Subway B,D,F Broadway/Lafayette stop or 6 train to Bleecker

December 08, 2005

Rising Up: the Alams at South Asian International Film Festival, NYC

Alisha

South Asian International Film Festival
Thursday, December 8, 2005
1:30 p.m
150 West 17th Street
NYC

Rising Up: The Alams

Documentary, 11 minutes, MiniDV

director/DP: Konrad Aderer

In this short documentary we meet the Alams, a Bangladeshi family living in Coney Island, Brooklyn. Mohammed Alam, father to two young U.S.-born daughters, is one of 13,000 immigrants facing deportation as a consequence of Special Registration, a post-9/11 policy which targeted nationals of Muslim countries. But the Alams are not just victims. Learn how they fight back as members of South Asian community organization D.R.U.M. (Desis Rising Up and Moving).

Rising Up: The Alams was produced as part of the non-profit media project Life or Liberty, as part of Third World Newsreel's Call For Change series.

November 21, 2005

Rising Up: the Alams at Mesa FilmFest

Alisha

22nd Annual Mesa FilmFest
Monday, Nov 21
8:30am
Middle East Studies Association
1219 North Santa Rita Avenue
The University of Arizona
Tucson AZ

Rising Up: The Alams

Documentary, 11 minutes, MiniDV

director/DP: Konrad Aderer

In this short documentary we meet the Alams, a Bangladeshi family living in Coney Island, Brooklyn. Mohammed Alam, father to two young U.S.-born daughters, is one of 13,000 immigrants facing deportation as a consequence of Special Registration, a post-9/11 policy which targeted nationals of Muslim countries. But the Alams are not just victims. Learn how they fight back as members of South Asian community organization D.R.U.M. (Desis Rising Up and Moving).

Rising Up: The Alams was produced as part of the non-profit media project Life or Liberty, as part of Third World Newsreel's Call For Change series.

October 13, 2005

Surviving Katrina: fundraiser/screening

Many of you may know that my brothers and I took a direct hit from Katrina in our dad’s house in Bay St. Louis, MS, where the storm surge was over 30 feet. For us, it was a life-changing experience, which we managed to capture on video.

We were very lucky to have survived, and privileged to have had homes in New York to go back to. For the real victims the catastrophe won’t be over for months and years. So the screening of this video is being used to raise money for Habitat for Humanity, which provides housing for those left homeless along the Gulf Coast.

A Corner of Her Eye
MiniDV, 18 minutes

Three brothers from New York match their wits and bodies against the escalating fury of Katrina. A first-hand experience of her approach, landfall and aftermath in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi.

Screening and fundraiser for victims of hurricane Katrina:

Thursday, October 13, 2005

White Rabbit
145 East Houston Street
New York City
(between Eldridge and Forsyth Sts., right next door from the Sunrise Theater)
Subway: F to Second Ave. Station

Doors open 6:30 pm
Screening at 8:00 pm
Requested donation: $10

$5 cocktail specials and $3 Dos Equis until 8pm. No one will be turned away. Larger donations are welcome. Tax-deductible checks can be made out to Habitat for Humanity.

October 08, 2005

"Rising Up: The Alams" at BAM

My short Rising Up: The Alams will have its official premiere:

Sat, Oct 8 at 4:30, 9:15pm
BAM Rose Cinemas
Peter Jay Sharp Building
30 Lafayette Street, Brooklyn, NY
Ph: 718.636.4100

Rising Up: The Alams was produced by Konrad Aderer (Life or Liberty), as part of Third World Newsreel's Call For Change series.

Third World Newsreel’s Call for Change:
The Immigrant Experience (68min)
BAM Rose Cinemas

Featuring RISING UP: THE ALAMS, WE TOO SING AMERICA, SAJ: MUSLIM IN AMERICA , DASTAAR:DEFENDING SIKH IDENTITY, AMONG THE FIRST TO DIE, JUST RALPH, RESPECT

These new short films all deal with multi-faceted issues that face the immigrant community in New York and beyond after September 11.

There will be a talkback with the filmmakers and community group leaders after the 4:30pm screening. Groups featured include: DRUM (Desis Rising Up and Moving), the Sikh Coalition and Domestic Workers United.

info and tickets:
http://www.bam.org/film/series.aspx?id=39

Directions and parking:
http://www.bam.org/visitor/direction.aspx

General admission $10. Tickets are available at the BAM Rose Cinemas box office, by phone at 718.777.FILM, or online at www.bam.org.

October 02, 2005

Rising Up: the Alams at Coney Island Film Festival

Alisha

Coney Island Film Festival
Sunday October 2nd
2pm
Sideshows By The Seashore
3006 West 12th St.
Coney Island, Brooklyn

Rising Up: The Alams

Documentary, 11 minutes, MiniDV

director/DP: Konrad Aderer

In this short documentary we meet the Alams, a Bangladeshi family living in Coney Island, Brooklyn. Mohammed Alam, father to two young U.S.-born daughters, is one of 13,000 immigrants facing deportation as a consequence of Special Registration, a post-9/11 policy which targeted nationals of Muslim countries. But the Alams are not just victims. Learn how they fight back as members of South Asian community organization D.R.U.M. (Desis Rising Up and Moving).

Rising Up: The Alams was produced as part of the non-profit media project Life or Liberty, as part of Third World Newsreel's Call For Change series.

August 20, 2005

Rising Up... in Philly

STREET MOVIES!! Summer 2005
"urban drive-ins without the cars"

Saturday, August 20
Center City
Co-hosted by Community Youth Organizing Committee
8:30 pm @Jamaican Jerk Hut
1436 South Street
Philadelphia, PA

Short videos involving Communities Against Anti-Asian Violence, Desis Rising UP and Moving, and FIERCE.

Chinatown is Not For Sale!
by Youth Organizers of the Chinatown Justice
A project of CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities
(43 min)
A new video about Manhattan's Chinatown community struggle against gentrification and displacement. This video examines the impact of racist real estate practices in Chinatown and how low income Chinese tenants are displaced to "make room" for young white professionals. The film also includes footage of CJP's efforts to combat this displacement.

Rising Up: The Alams
directed by Konrad Aderer
part of the Third World Newsreel / Call for Change series, with the participation of Desis Rising Up and Moving
(11 min 40 sec)
In April 2003 Mohammed Alam, husband and father to two U.S.-born girls, endured the discriminatory and degrading process of Special Registration. Along with 80,000 immigrants from predominantly Muslim countries, he was confined for hours in a cell, searched, fingerprinted, and subjected to anti-Muslim slurs.

Now Mohammed faces deportation to his native Bangladesh, where he could face arrest and torture. But the Alams are not just victims; learn Mohammed and his wife Moni fight back as members of South Asian community organization DRUM -- Desis Rising Up and Moving.

Fenced Out
by Paper Tiger Television, Fierce! and The New Neutral Zone
(20 min)
A short documentary about the fight for the Christopher St. pier - one of the only places in New York City where youth of color, low income, homeless and l/g/b/t/q youth could once hang out. To further explore their connection to the piers, the producers interviewed older l/g/b/t/q activists about the history of the location and its connection to the gay liberation movement of the 1960's.

August 05, 2005

FUNDRAISER FOR TWO UNJUSTLY DETAINED TEENAGERS

Friday, August 5
5 PM-11PM
Brecht Forum
451 West Street, NYC
(on the West Side Highway
between Bank & Bethune Streets)
see bottom of entry for transit info

For those of you not familiar with the recent case of two teenage girls being detained and interrogated on unsubstantiated allegations of terrorism, read this entry.

Next Friday I'll have the privilege of speaking on a panel about how artists and activists are responding to these kinds of abuses, at a fundraiser for the two girls and their families.

-- Konrad

AMERICA'S CIVIL LIBERTIES CRISIS : Respond with Music and Solidarity!
DISAPPEARED IN AMERICA Exhibition

FUNDRAISER FOR TWO TEENAGERS UNJUSTLY DETAINED
& accused of being a threat to national security
Tashnuba Hyder (Bangladesh): detained and deported with family
Adama Bah (Guinea): detained and eventually released, all charges dropped

5 PM: DISAPPEARED IN AMERICA exhibition (VISIBLE Collective)
7 PM: PANEL DISCUSSION on Arts & Activism in Age of Crisis
8 PM: FUNDRAISER with performances
Performers :
*Bengali musicians
*Guinean musicians
*Spoken word artists

5-7 PM: Opening of DISAPPEARED IN AMERICA exhibit @ Brecht Forum

Brief remarks by members of VISIBLE Collective

7-8 PM: Panel Discussion: Artists & Activists respond to the Civil Liberties crisis

Moderator: Naeem Mohaiemen, VISIBLE Collective

Panelists:
Avideh Moussavian, New York Immigrant Coalition
Aziz Huq, NYU Brennan Center
Fariba Alam (BANGLA EAST SIDE)
Konrad Aderer (RISING UP: THE ALAMS, FAROUK ABDEL-MUHTI: POLITICAL PRISONER)
Film Clips:
RISING UP: THE ALAMS, BANGLA EAST SIDE, DISAPPEARED
8-11PM: Fundraiser for Tashnuba Hyder and Adama Bah
*Family and friends of Tashnuba & Adama talk about the case

Followed by a Multicultural Extravaganza
Performers including:
*Bengali musicians—Bangladeshi Institute of performing Arts
*Guinean musicians—Ahmadou Bah& Others
Classical Musicians: Including pianist tomoya kano
Classical Indian Dance: Samita of KAASH
*Spoken word artists, *Others TBA; *Film Clips
__________________________________________________

DIRECTIONS:
A, C, E or L to 14th Street & 8th Ave, walk down 8th Ave. to Bethune, turn right, walk west to the River, turn left

1, 2, 3 or 9 to 14th Street & 7th Ave, get off at south end of station, walk west on 12th Street to 8th Ave. left to Bethune, turn right, walk west to the River, turn left.

PATH Train to Christopher Street north on Greenwich St to Bank Street, left to the river.

#11 or #20 Bus to Abingdon Square, west on Bethune

#14A or #14D Bus to 8th Ave & 14th Street, walk down 8th Ave. and west on Bethune to the river

#8 Bus to 10th & West Streets for more info email this email address! Or 917 602 4450 ; all proceeds will be divided by the two families!

Donations are tax exempt:
Emergency Families Fund / CAIR
c/o 9-11 relief program / Adem Carroll
166-26 89th Avenue
Jamaica, NY, 11432
www.cair-ny.org

June 16, 2005

Fundraiser and screening for Life or Liberty

Life or Liberty (lifeorliberty.org), a non-profit media project under the fiscal sponsorship of Third World Newsreel, tells the stories of immigrants fighting injustice and racism under post-9/11 policies. Currently in production is Enemy Alien, an hour-long documentary on the two-year fight for the release of Palestinian activist Farouk Abdel-Muhti. This documentary is being produced for public television and theatrical distribution. Funds are needed for production, distribution and outreach.
Shokriea Alisha
Enemy Alien (trailer, 9 minutes)

The dramatic two-year struggle to free Palestinian activist Farouk Abdel-Muhti from illegal Homeland Security detention unfolds through the eyes of the Japanese American filmmaker, as he joins the fight for Farouk’s freedom, and confronts his own family’s World War II internment.

Rising Up: The Alams (11 minutes)

This documentary shows how the Alams, a Bangladeshi family living in Coney Island, move beyond victimization under anti-Muslim policies to actively fighting for change as members of South Asian community organization D.R.U.M. (Desis Rising Up and Moving).

Thursday, June 16, 2005
7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m.

(doors open 6pm, screening at 8p.m.)
White Rabbit
145 East Houston Street
New York City
(between Eldridge and Forsyth Sts., right next door from the Sunrise Theater)
Subway: F to Second Ave. Station
$5 cocktail specials and $3 Dos Equis until 8pm.
Requested donation: $10
No one will be turned away. Larger donations are sought. Tax-deductible checks can be made out to Third World Newsreel, with “Life or Liberty” in the memo line. Please contact konrad@lifeorliberty.org if you or someone you know may be interested in making a larger donation and being listed in the documentary credits.

Following the screenings will be brief comments from the producer and the Center for Constitutional Rights, an outreach partner for Enemy Alien.

June 08, 2005

Rising Up: The Alams at Anthology Film Archives

My recently completed short Rising Up: The Alams will be showing:

Wednesday, June 8
6:00 p.m.
Anthology Film Archives
32 Second Avenue (at Second Street)

NEWFILMMAKERS GOES GLOBAL
6:00 THIRD WORLD NEWSREEL PROGRAM
Founded in 1967, Third World Newsreel is one of the oldest alternative media arts organizations in the United States. It is committed to the creation and appreciation of independent and social issue media by and about people of color, and the peoples of developing countries around the world. More at www.twn.org.

April 08, 2005

Tribute to Farouk this Tuesday on WBAI

This coming Tuesday (April 12th) will mark the one year anniversary since the release of our brother and comrade in struggle, Farouk Abdel-Muhti, from custody in the immigration jails of the United States Immigration authorities, on an alleged visa violation. As many in the progressive community know, Farouk passed away tragically just one hundred years after his release, having fallen victim to a fatal heart attack, undoubtedly brought on by conditions he endured while in custody in the gulags of the US Immigration authorities, much to the shock and dismay of his family, friends, and supporters. The details of his incarceration are outlined below.

We are planning a tribute in Farouk’s honor on WBAI’s Wake-Up Call (99.5 FM in New York, www.wbai.org) this Tuesday, April 12th, at 6:15 am. This will be an extended segment where we will discuss his life and WBAI will re-broadcast some of his interviews with them, both before and after his release. We send out thanks to the Wake-Up Call staff at WBAI’s Radio Pacifica in New York for hosting this event, and hope you will be listening.

Additionally, in the near future we will host a commemorative trip out to the cemetery where Farouk is buried (Forest Green Cemetery, plot J-26 in the Islamic Section) in Marlboro, New Jersey, for those who are interested. We have a tentative date of April 30 set for this occasion, but will let you know for certain, once the event is planned.

Below please find a statement detailing Farouk’s struggles for social justice, and commemorating his life.

Sincerely,

Sharin Chiorazzo and Tarek Abdel-Muhti

Statement Honoring the Life and Work of Farouk Abdel-Muhti

Farouk Abdel Muhti was a political prisoner, a freedom fighter, a revolutionary, and a political activist who dedicated his life to the question of Palestine and to the attainment of legitimate political rights and independent statehood for the Palestinian People. Farouk was at an Anti-War Forum at the Philadelphia Ethical Society, hosted by an assortment of human rights groups gathered together in their opposition to political detentions in the United States and on the repercussions of the post-September 11th government policies on immigrants, on the night he died, July 21, 2004. He had just finished delivering an inspirational speech and message to the progressive community, whom he credited with his release from immigration detention, when his fatal heart attack struck him. Farouk was pronounced dead less than two hours later at Jefferson Hospital in Philadelphia, around 10 pm, to the shock and dismay of his friends, supporters and loved ones.

Farouk was a stateless Palestinian, who came to the attention of Immigration authorities earlier in his life, but more intensely after September 11th, 2001, when he began speaking out fervently for the rights of Arabs and Muslims in the United States and for the rights of his people, the Palestinians, who came under severe attack in Israel after the so called “War on Terror” had begun in the United States, and the Bush Administration turned a blind eye to Ariel Sharon’s brutal policies against the Palestinian People, which were intensified during this period.

Farouk was picked up by the Absconder Task Force in New York at his home, on April 26th, 2002, about one month after he began broadcasts on WBAI’s Wake-Up Call, a progressive Pacifica radio station based in New York City, (99.5 fm, www.wbai.org) in a program which exposed the plight of the Palestinian People and the brutality being waged against them by the Sharon Government in Israel. He spent the next two years being shuttled between nine different jails throughout New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, including eight months and ten days in solitary confinement in York, PA, as punishment for his political activism, under the pretext of an immigration violation. It was during this period that Farouk’s health deteriorated, mainly due to the stress put upon his body by the constant moves, mistreatment, beatings and withholding of thyroid and hypertension medication from him by prison officials and guards.

Farouk was never charged with a crime. He was finally ordered released on April 9th, 2004 by Federal District Judge Yvette Kane of Pennsylvania, who ruled that the government’s holding of Farouk was unconstitutional. Farouk mainly fought for social justice and rights for all oppressed peoples, including African Americans in the United States, and indigenous peoples all over the world, throughout much of his life. He embraced the struggles of people in Latin America, Cuba, Puerto Rico (around the issue of Vieques), Palestine, and those of all others deprived of their fundamental economic, social, civil, political, and human rights. He was especially vocal on the issue of workers’ rights, and supportive of the struggle of workers around the world from a class-conscious, socialist perspective. Farouk voiced his commitment to socialism and social justice, and officially became a member of the USA Socialist Party in 2004.

Farouk believed in the extension of rights and justice to all peoples. He brought many progressive groups in the United States together around the ideas of human rights, workers’ rights and social justice, linking all of these to the struggle for legitimate political rights and independent statehood in Palestine.

Farouk was a true revolutionary, who believed in legitimate resistance to occupation and political repression, wherever it is found, but who at the same time, condemned terrorism, including the state terrorism waged by states such as Israel against the Palestinian People, and the current American occupation against the Iraqi people. Farouk always reiterated that he and his people were victims of terrorism at the hands of the current Israeli administration and previous administrations, who had occupied his land and denied him and other Palestinians the right to return to their country, in spite of United Nations Security Council Resolution 194, and other resolutions signed onto by the United States, which are recognized as legally binding by the international community. Farouk condemned terrorism against civilian populations in all forms, both in the United States and abroad.

Farouk was fervently anti-imperialist, but not anti-American, even though the current US Administration under George W. Bush denied him his freedom and his rights, and even tried to deny him his dignity by imprisoning him without charges, by withholding medication from him, and by holding him in solitary confinement for more than eight months at York County Prison in 2003.. But this did not stop Farouk's dedication to his work and to the just causes he embraced, namely justice and rights for Palestinians and foe oppressed peoples all over the world.

Farouk considered America to be his home and New York to be his city. He considered himself and his Palestinian community to be integral members of American society, and as such, a part of the fabric of immigrants that make up American society.

Farouk was Anti-Zionist, but not Anti-Jewish. He worked with progressive Jewish groups in the New York City area on the question of Palestine, and encouraged all groups to work together on this and other pertinent issues of social justice and equality everywhere. He was against racism and oppression in all its forms, including in the Jewish case.

Farouk brought many diverse groups, peoples and struggles together, from the left, including workers, socialists, liberals, anarchists, those embracing African-American struggles, Latin American struggles, and the struggles of indigenous peoples, in addition to the struggles of his own people for political, social and human rights, justice, and equality. He was exemplary for exposing the true situation of the Palestinian People to an oftentimes uninformed North American public. He never attempted to gain recognition for himself, but utilized his growing popularity as a platform to speak about and expose the plight of his people, the Palestinians.

Farouk did amazing work and accomplished a great deal in his life, even while imprisoned. He mobilized many immigrant detainees together during this time, and took up their concerns and legal problems as his own. His selfless and tireless commitment to human rights should be held up as a model to all of us. We were all honored to have known this great man.

His passing is a great loss to the New York City progressive community, and to all those who believe in social justice, human rights, and equality for all peoples. He will be missed immensely however, we must carry on his work to the best of our abilities, in order to adequately honor the life and work of this great man, who will not be forgotten.

Sharin Chiorazzo (Farouk’s fiancée and comrade in struggle)

July 21, 2004

NEWFILMMAKERS TWN SHORT FILM PROGRAM

Anthology Film Archives
32 2nd Avenue
Wednesday
July 21, 2004
7:00 PM New York, NY 10003 USA
Konrad Aderer FAROUK ABDEL MUHTI: POLITICAL PRISONER A look at one Palestinian activist’s wrongful imprisonment as a result of a Justice Department initiative to arrest immigrants in the wake of 9/11. & Norman Cowie SCENES FROM AN ENDLESS WAR Experimental video on militarism, globalization and the war on terrorism.

July 15, 2004

Asian American Writers' Workshop

The Asian American Writers' Workshop presents

Theater, Words, Movement, & Film
exploring the immigrant & refugee experience to the U.S.

Curated by Mary Ellen Obias

Thursday, July 15, 2004, 7 PM

@ The Asian American Writers' Workshop
16 West 32nd Street, Suite 10A
(btwn 5th Avenue & Broadway)
New York City

$5 suggested donation

Continue reading "Asian American Writers' Workshop" »

May 15, 2004

Albany Independent Film Forum

Albany Independent Film Forum
Saturday, May 15
2:00pm
info: |

February 21, 2004

Voices Rising: Resistance Film and Music

Queens Museum of Art
Saturday, February 21
2:00pm

Continue reading "Voices Rising: Resistance Film and Music" »