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Posts Tagged ‘Pinochet’

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It’s June 27th, I’m Gina Telaroli and this is TakePart.com’s look at the week in social action

 

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The TakePart Top 10 Weekly Roundup is a compilation of the week’s most notable stories from our entertainment-meets-social-action blogging network. Check out some of our most popular stories of the week, as well as a few TakePart blogger favorites!

Nicole Hughes:

U.S. Media Ignores Link Between Midwest Floods and Global Warming

Top 10 Houseplants for Removing Indoor Air Pollution

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Andy Kondrat:

Dubai to Build Rotating Positive Energy Tower

Bioethicist Peter Singer Tackles World Food Shortage

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Jon Popham:

Americacorps Workers Assist Flood Ravaged Town

Australians “Out-Fat” Americans

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Giulia Rozzi:

Progressive Book Club

Oprah Recommends “A New Earth”

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Gina Telaroli:

Human Rights Watch 2008 Film Festival Update

SilverDocs 2008 Update


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So the first week of Human Rights Watch is almost over so if you’re in NYC, catch something while you still can. I’ll be posting reviews of the remaining films in the next few days before they screen so keep checking back. Each film’s screening times will be listed and I’ll leave a schedule of reviews to come here.

Also in case you’re just tuning in now, here’s a little refresher on what’s already played:

Here’s what’s ahead:

After all is said and done I’ll post a comprehensive piece full of Takepart links that will let you connect to the issues in the film!

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Calle Santa Fe - Director: Carmen Castillo; Country: Chile/France/Belgium; Release: 2007, Runtime: 163

Screening : Wed Jun 18: 7

Human Rights Watch Film Festival

For the documentary filmmaker that has often thought about including their own story in their film, Carmen Castillo’s Calle Santa Fe is worth considering.

A personal meditation on her time in Chile in the early 1970’s and the death of her husband, her comrade and revolutionary Miguel Enriquez, Castillo tells of her past while revisiting the scene where her husband was killed. Much of her story is told in voice-over and in turn she creates a journal of sorts surrounding her story, past and present.

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It must be something in the genocide. How else explain the direct relationship between brutal dictators and longevity. Franco died at 82 , Pinochet at 91, and now Suharto, 86, is clutching for dear life onto his, well, life. Suffering multiple organ failures, Suharto was so near death that his tomb had been prepared and his funeral planned. And yet, somehow, Suharto has made a comeback and his talking and breathing without a ventilator. The dictator’s doctor hopes to send Suharto home but acknowledges “we can only do our best and let God decide.” uh-oh. let’s hope God is more lucid now than he was when he decided to let Suharto steal billions of dollars and kill between 700,000 and a million people.Tell Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to demand justice and accountability for the third of the population of East Timor killed by the Indonesian miliatary.

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