Rising Up: The AlamsScreenings & Events

RISING UP… at PRISONER?S JUSTICE FILM FESTIVAL 2006

By February 26, 2006November 14th, 2019No Comments

February 23-26, 2006

Innis Town Hall – University of Toronto

corner of Sussex Ave and St. George St.


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-verit? 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 Rivi?re 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