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#homecoming #hair #beautician #LouisianaStylist #shreveport #bossiercity #DivineInterventions
The second edition of Divine Interventions: Documentary, Spirituality & Social Justice is about to begin, and we will soon be screening powerful docs on spirituality & social justice across the Cinema Politica Network!! For a sneak preview, watch the trailer for Ayiti Toma, The Land of the Living, a unique and culturally poignant doc that provides the platform for Haitians to speak for themselves.
TONIGHT: Cinema Politica Network's Prince Albert local is partnering up with the Prince Albert Chapter of the The Council of Canadians & the JMC Public Library to show THE PEOPLE OF THE KATTAWAPISKAK RIVER, Alanis Obamsawin's moving account of the aboriginal community in Canada whose members sparked the Idle No More movement.
Divine Interventions crosses the Atlantic! The good folks over at Cinema Politica Oslo will be screening HEART OF SKY, HEART OF EARTH tomorrow night and we couldn't be more pleased that they will be sharing this incredible work on Mayan resistance to multinationals in Guatemala with their audience at the University of Oslo, Norway.
Beat Nation: Art, Hip Hop and Aboriginal Culture describes a generation of artists who juxtapose urban culture with Aboriginal identity to create innovative and unexpected new works that reflect the realities of Aboriginal peoples today. Running at the Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal until January 5, 2014.
Another great screening happening tonight, sponsored by Cinema Politica Charlottetown and the Island Peace Committee.
HIT & STAY recounts the amazing story of radical priests, nuns, and everyday people who risked prison and took on the government to end the Vietnam War.
Events in the Guatemalan northern city of Huehuetenango during the much-awaited end of the Mayan Oxlajuj Baktun provide a clear reflection of the divisions and challenges faced by Mayan communities today. The media exploited erroneous apocalyptic rumors, the government and business sectors viewed it as an opportunity to gain economically through tourism, and progressive groups seized the opportunity “to strengthen ancestral wisdom and never-ending search for balance” while vindicating what seem never-ending struggles for justice, inclusion, and self-determination.
The folks over at Cinema Politica UBC are getting fired up for an exciting event centered around the Idle No More movement, featuring a screening of Divine Docs title THE PEOPLE OF THE KATTAWAPISKAK RIVER and two shorts by aboriginal filmmaker, activist and UBC graduate Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers, who will be in attendance.