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In Rwanda We Say… The Family That Does Not Speak Dies

Canadian Campus Newswire


September 23, 2005

Source: Concordia University: http://publicaffairs.concordia.ca/mediaroom/pressreleases/2005/09/004950.shtml

In Rwanda We Say… The Family That Does Not Speak Dies

MONTREAL/September 23, 2005 —

African Film Series launches 2005-2006 Peace and Conflict Resolution lecture series

On Tuesday, September 27, Concordia’s Peace and Conflict Resolution lecture series will resume with a screening of the film In Rwanda We Say…The Family That Does Not Speak Dies, the first of 8 films in the sub-series Exploring Conflict and Its Resolution on the African Continent through Film. The film will be shown at 6:45 p.m. in the D.B. Clarke Theatre in the Henry F. Hall Building (1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. West, basement level). It will be followed by a response by Dr. Frank Chalk, founding co-director of the Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies and associate professor of history at Concordia University, and conclude with an open discussion session.

The film, directed by Anne Aghion, is an astonishing testament to the liberating power of speech, an important, intimate and fascinating examination of how, and whether, people can overcome fear, hatred and deep emotional scars after genocide, to forge a common future. Over the past several years award-winning filmmaker Aghion traveled to rural Rwanda to chart the progress and impact of the ethnic reconciliation programs there. In the film, she continues her quest to learn how the human spirit survives a trauma like the 1994 attempt to wipe out the Tutsi minority, which claimed 800,000 lives in 100 days.

For more information about this event, contact Dr. Andrew Ivaska at (514) 848-2424 ext. 2419, or Dr. Leander Schneider at (514)848-2424, ext. 5601.

About the sub-series Exploring Conflict and Its Resolution on the African Continent through Film

Conflict and its resolution on the African continent are often engaged within a narrow perspective that hones in on spectacular and headline-grabbing outbreaks of extreme violence. This perspective often frames these outbreaks by falling back upon well-worn perceptions of ‘Africa’ as a space of primordial violence. However, these conflicts - including recent ones in Sierra Leone, Liberia and the Democratic Republic of Congo - are in fact crucially conditioned by specific historical and socio-political dynamics that often have global dimensions. These include Africa’s place in the global economy, new religious identities, and the circulation of mass cultural images and icons.

The series under the aegis of Concordia University’s Peace and Conflict Resolution academic lecture series engages and examines shallow representations of disaster in Africa by understanding conflict as the product of broader social and historical dynamics and observing it in its multiple, and often ‘mundane,’ forms. The eight films, mostly by African directors, that are featured in the series avoid the pitfall of stereotyping Africa by focusing on some of the broader dynamics of everyday life that shape conflict and the possibilities of its resolution. The films thus explore the ways in which Africans are negotiating conflict along prominent social cleavages of gender, class, religion and ethnicity.

30

Source:

Chris Mota,

Senior Public Relations Officer

Concordia University

tel: (514) 848-2424 ext. 4884

cel: (514) 952-5556

fax: (514) 848-3383

e-mail: mota@alcor.concordia.ca


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