I Speak ‘Banglish’ – Bangladesh Art Workshop

I Speak ‘Banglish’,  an art workshop for Bangladeshi and South Asian Youth, will be held in Queens and Brooklyn, New York from May 2 to May 14. I Speak Banglish Workshop is specially designed for kids of Bangladeshi origin. Boys and girls age between 10 – 18 years can participant at the workshop. The workshop is organized by Shetu NYC, supported by Citizens Committee for New York City and co-sponsored by Bangladesh Institute of Performing Arts. The aim of the workshop is to explore issues of cultural history and identity through historical art, language, poetry, food and discussions related to issues of regional importance and relevance. Participants will have a great opportunity to showcase their artworks at the final exhibition!

Youth artists will explore their cultural identity and foster civic engagement stemming from their passions while addressing issues in their society. Participants will be invited to analyze poetry, visual and contemporary art to explore ways of impacting their community by creating visual work that speaks to shared values. The workshops will be facilitated by Sharmin Hossain, Director of the Bangladeshi Historical Memory Project. The workshop is free and no art skill is prerequisite skill set is not required.

Space is limited, registration requested.

Participants can participate in any ONE of the locations only

I Speak ‘Banglish’ Workshop Location

[ezcol_1half] Brooklyn Workshop
Session 1: Tuesday, May 2nd, 2017, 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm
Session 2: Sunday, May 7th, 2017, 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Venue:
Khan Tutorial, 188 Dahill Rd, Brooklyn, NY 11218

[/ezcol_1half] [ezcol_1half_end] Queens Workshop
Session 1: Saturday, May 13th, 2017, 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm
Session 2: Sunday, May 14th, 2017, 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm

Venue:
BIPA, 36-01 37th Ave., Long Island City, NY 11101

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Date of the final exhibition and prize giving ceremony (six prizes for two groups, $100, $75 and $50 gift card) will be announced later.

Contact:

347-494-0409

Bangladeshi Children Art Workshop

Bangladeshi Children Art Workshop is a project of BACONA (Bangladeshi American Center of North America) in Brooklyn. Moinul Alam Bappi and Mohammad Mahab will teach Bangladeshi kids how to draw and create arts. The event is free and all are welcome – children, adult, parents, on lookers!

Venue:

Avenue C Plaza (Kensington)
Ave C & McDonalds Ave, Brooklyn NY 11218

Contact:

347-365-7435
baconainc@gmail.com

Children’s Art Competition at Bangladesh Consulate in New York

Children’s Art Competition at Bangladesh Consulate in New York will be arranged to commemorate Sheikh Mujibur Rahman‘s 96th birthday.

Drawing Competition:
This is open to students of Bangladeshi origin studying in New York City. Two groups, grade 1-3 and grade 4-7 will participate in drawing competition at the consulate office. Subject: ‘Motherland Bangladesh’. Please come with pen, pencil, paper, color etc. March 12, 11:00 am – 2:00 pm

Essay Competition:
This competition is Bangladeshi origin students of grade 8-12. Subject: ‘Bangabondhu and Bangladesh’. Essay can be written in Bangla or English (1000 words). Submission dateline March 12, at 2:00 pm

Award will be given to winners on March 17, 2016

Venue:

Bangladesh Consulate in New York
34-18 Northern Blvd., Ground Floor, Long Island City, NY 11101

Contacts:

212-599-6767
646-645-7242
347-827-5362

Documentary Films on Bangladesh - Part 5

Documentary Films on Bangladesh – Part 5

Documentary Films on Bangladesh by non-Bangladeshi Film Makers

A list of documentary films on Bangladesh was published in Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4. This is the fifth installment. All documentaries in this list were made by non-Bangladeshi directors, producers, and production companies. It is not a review or not a critique of the documentaries – a mere list. This list is incomplete, so we will write on them as they come to our attention. The list here is in random order.

This group of documentary films is not entirely on Bangladesh. In a single documentary, Bangladesh was mentioned in a documentary as part of the issue presented. Bangladesh was presented in one of the episodes of a series of documentaries.

The Human Scale

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Director: Andreas Dalsgaard
2012 • 83 Min • Denmark

Half of the human population lives in urban areas. By 2050, this will increase to 80%. Life in a megacity is both enchanting and problematic. Today, we face peak oil, climate change, loneliness, and severe health issues due to our way of life. But why? The Danish architect and professor Jan Gehl has studied human behavior in cities for four decades. He has documented how modern cities repel human interaction and argues that we can build cities in a way that considers human needs for inclusion and intimacy. ‘The Human Scale‘ meets thinkers, architects, and urban planners across the globe. It questions our assumptions about modernity, exploring what happens when we put people at the center of our planning.

Poverty, Inc.

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Director: Michael Matheson Miller
2014 • 94 Min • USA

The West has positioned itself as the protagonist of the development narrative. However, the results have been mixed, sometimes even catastrophic, and developing world leaders have become increasingly vocal in calling for change. Drawing on perspectives gathered from over 150 interviews shot over four years in 20 countries, Poverty, Inc. explores the hidden side of doing good. From disaster relief to TOMs Shoes, from adoptions to agricultural subsidies, Poverty, Inc. follows the butterfly effect of our most well-intentioned efforts and pulls back the curtain on the poverty industrial complex – the multi-billion dollar market of NGOs, multilateral agencies, and for-profit aid contractors. Are we catalyzing development or propagating a system where the poor stay poor while the rich get hipper?

Plan B

Plan B documentary poster

Director: Hal Weiner
2010 • 84 Min • USA

Narrated by Matt Damon, Plan B is a 90-minute documentary based on the book by environmental visionary Lester Brown. Shot on location around the world, the film’s message is clear and unflinching — either confront the realities of climate change or suffer the consequences of lost civilizations and failed states. Ultimately, Plan B provides audiences with a glimpse into a new and emerging economy based on renewable resources and strategies to avoid the growing threat of global warming. Appearing with Lester Brown are Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman, Pulitzer Prize winner Tom Friedman, former Governor and Secretary of the Interior Bruce Babbitt, along with other scholars and scientists. Locations include China, Japan, South Korea, India, Italy, Turkey, Bangladesh, Zambia, Haiti, and the U.S.

Whores’ Glory

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Director: Michael Glawogger
2011 • 110 Min • Germany & Austria

Whores’ Glory is an examination of the lives, needs, troubles, and hopes of prostitutes in  Bangkok (Thailand), Faridpur (Bangladesh) and Reynosa (Mexico). The first part deals with the everyday work of prostitutes in Bangkok in a brothel called the Fish Tank. The prostitutes sit in a brightly lit glass room and are chosen by clients by the number used to identify them. The second part concerns a vast brothel called the City of Joy in Faridpur, Bangladesh. There, 600 to 800 women work in a confined space. In one scene, a madame buying a prostitute from another madame haggles over the price of the girl.  The third part takes place in Reynosa, near the Texas border. There, it is expected, as in other Mexican cities, to designate the legal areas for prostitution as zonas de tolerancia (tolerance zones). The entrance to the Zona is secured with barriers and is constantly monitored by the police.

Let Them Eat Cake

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Director: Alexis Krasilovsky
2014 • 81 Min • USA

Six years in the making, filmed in a dozen countries, ‘Let Them Eat Cake‘ is a poetic film essay that runs the full range from the pleasures and perils of overeating to the tragedies of world hunger.

Let Them Eat Cake is not your typical documentary.  It is a poetic essay that takes you through twelve countries, exploring the contrast between pastry making and consumption in various parts of the world.  While in some parts of the world, those who farm the ingredients for pastries can’t even afford them, in Paris, Tokyo, and Los Angeles, lavish pastries adorn the shelves of pastry shops along the streets.  Written and directed by award-winning director Alexis Krasilovsky, Let Them Eat Cake addresses the planetary emergency of too little food while seducing the viewer with the lavish traditions and beauty of pastry and cake-making that call us back to our childhood roots.

ManIslam – Islam and Masculinity

ManIslam - Islam and Masculinity

Director: Nefise Özkal Lorentzen
2014 • 58 Min • Norway

ManIslam – Islam and Masculinity‘ is a voyage into understanding the masculinities of Islam. Why does a man in Kuwait inspired by the 99 names of Allah and the Quranic stories create comics about superheroes called the 99? Why does a man in Bangladesh travel from one village to another and teach the community how to play a board game? Why does a man in Indonesia encourage other men to wear mini shirts in a demonstration? They all have the same target. They will change the dark side of the masculinities in their cultures by playing games.

Years of Living Dangerously

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Directors:  Joel Bach and David Gelber
2014 • 58 Min/episode • USA

Years of Living Dangerously is a documentary in 9 episodes about worldwide climate change and global warming. Bangladesh was extensively covered in episode 8 (A Dangerous Future) and episode 9 (Moving a Mountain). From the damage wrought by Hurricane Sandy to the upheaval caused by drought in the Middle East, this groundbreaking documentary event series provides first-hand reports on those affected by and seeking solutions to climate change.

In episode 8, Michael C. Hall travels to Bangladesh to see how climate change will impact workers and the poor in developing countries in the coming decades, when a projected 150 million people will be forced to leave their homes to escape sea level rise and increased drought, insect-borne disease, and flooding. In episode 9, Hall concludes his journey to Bangladesh, where rising seas are expected to submerge 17% of the country.

Don’t Tell My Mother

Don't Tell My Mother That I Am in...Dhaka_Bangladesh

2008 • 58 Min • USA and France
Producer: Diego Buñuel

Don’t Tell My Mother is a television program hosted by Diego Buñuel and shown on the National Geographic Adventure channel. In this documentary’s episode of season 2, Dhaka was presented as a destination. Dhaka is one of the fastest-growing cities in the world. Amidst the busy streets, energetic creativity bubbles up in the most unlikely places. Diego begins his adventure in Dhaka, where the term urban jungle is given new meaning. In this area, Macaque monkeys have taken control.

Toughest Place To Be A…

Toughest Place To Be A ... Ferryman on Buriganga River

Producer: Simon Davies
2012 • 58 Min • UK

Toughest Place To Be A… is a BBC Two television documentary that offered various working or retired professionals in the United Kingdom a different and more challenging working environment in the same profession they worked in.

Bangladesh was presented in Series 3, episode 2.  57-year-old Colin Window, the bridge officer of the Woolwich Ferry, travels to Dhaka, Bangladesh, to train and work as a ferryman on the Buriganga River. Hosted by 70-year-old Muhammed Loteef in one of the city’s slums, Colin is introduced to his new vessel, a small wooden rowboat known as a Sampan. In temperatures of up to 40 degrees, Sampan operators row passengers and goods across the quarter-mile stretch of river every day, dodging the huge barges and passenger ships that dominate the Buriganga. As Mr Loteef shows Colin how to master the sampan, he meets the other people who live and work on the river and have seen it transformed by sewage, rubbish, and industrial waste. Once the lifeblood of a traditional fishing community, the Buriganga is now officially a dead river.

However, the changes to Buriganga are just a glimpse of the transformations disrupting life in Bangladesh. Every day, some 2000 people leave their villages and travel to Dhaka, desperate for work, as traditional professions such as farming are threatened by climate change. Yet even in Dhaka, over a quarter of a million children live rough on the city streets.

After ten training days, Colin faces his final challenge: operating the Sampan alone during rush hour, taking passengers, and dodging huge ships.

Bangla New Year Art Contest

Bangla New Year Art Contest in Atlanta to celebrate Boishakhi Festival. This year’s contest theme is ‘Beauty of Bangladesh‘. Apart from the contest, Boishakhi Mela will have cultural program for adults. US-based Bangladeshi artists and artists from Bangladesh will participate. There will be food booths, snack booth, kids food and much more.

Bangla New Year Art Contest For Children:  

Levels: Group A: Grades K-2nd and  Group B: Grades 3rd-5th

Art Medium: Pencil, Markers, Water colors, Acrylic, and Ink

What to bring with you: Bring your art medium, brushes, rulers, erasers, sharpeners

What will be provided: Art paper, color mixing plates, water and containers, tissues

To participate:
All participants/guardians must register by email.
Send name, grade and contact phone number to bestofbangla@gmail.com

Registration deadline: April 15, 2015

Contest will be held from 2:30 pm to 4:00 pm

Award: Best five art work will be awarded from each group and recognized on the stage.

Venue:

Berkmar High School
405 Pleasant Hill Avenue, Lilburn, GA 30047

Contacts:

404-519-0109
770-912-2769
678-698-8105

Ma, Mati, Manush | মা, মাটি, মানুষ

Ma, Mati, Manush  |  মা, মাটি, মানুষ

Introducing Bangladesh to New Generation of Bangladeshi Americans. The event is free and all are welcome.

Program:

Photography of Liberation War
From 1:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Stall (food, cloth etc)
From 12:00 noon – 6:00 pm

Main Event
Patriotic music and dance
From 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Venue

IS 230
73-10, 34 Ave., Jackson Heights, NY 11372

Contacts:

Jibon Biswas, 917-693-5021
Sabina Hai Urbi, 646-265-5522

Organized by Udichi School of Performing Arts, New York

10th Anniversary of Sur-Chondo Shilpi Goshthy

Cultural Program and Certificate Giving Ceremony in observance of 10th Anniversary of Sur-Chondo Shilpi Goshthy – A Bangladeshi cultural group.

All are welcome to attend. The event is free.

Program will start at 7 pm sharp.

Venue:

PS 69, 37 Avenue and 77 Street, Jackson Heights, NY

Contacts

Md. Emdadul Haq, 646-750-1272
Nadim Ahmed, 347-685-5947
Motaleb Biswas, 718-457-3313
Khairul Hossain, 718-938-6249
M. A. Rahman, 917-912-7654

 

Documentary Films on Bangladesh

Documentary Films on Bangladesh – Part 4

Documentary Films on Bangladesh by non-Bangladeshi Film Makers

A list of documentary films on Bangladesh previously published here in three parts. They can be found here: Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3. This is the fourth installment. The list focuses on Non-Bangladeshi or Non-resident Bangladeshi film makers. The principal focus is to compile a list of documentary films on Bangladesh  – it is not a review or not a critic. This list is not complete, therefore, as they come to our attention we will write on them. The list here is in random order.

Nine Months to Freedom

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Director: S. Sukhdev
1972 • 72 Min • India

The film showing at length the war of East Pakistan with West Pakistan which led to the formation of an independent state of Bangladesh. India had played a very crucial role in this war in supporting the new state of Bangladesh. This film shows the impact of the war nine months. Sukhdev’s documentary is a partisan chronicle of the history of Pakistan to the point where Bangladesh, led by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, demanded its freedom. Then it narrates the events after 25 March 1971, when Yahya Khan sent in the raping and rampaging Pakistani army, the heroic struggle of Bangladesh’s Mukti Bahini and finally the Indian Army’s defeat of Pakistan and the liberation of Bangladesh. The highlights of the film are its refutation of a clip from Pakistan TV with a strong voice-over, and the interview with an enraged Andre Malraux saying he wants to pick up a rifle and join the war against Yahya Khan’s army. Large parts of the story are told using a montage of stills, including newspaper headlines. In addition to footage from BBC TV and Pakistan TV, the film uses sequences of the massacre in Bangladesh (including the opening shot of a dog ripping apart a human corpse).

The Most Fearless

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Director: Heather Kessinger
2014 • 77 Min • USA

Teenage Nasima struggles to achieve her destiny as a world class competitive surfer in conservative Bangladesh where women don’t even swim in public. The Most Fearless is a dynamic and universally accessible true story. A documentary film about youth, hope, and surfing; full of compelling characters, set in an exotic location, and rich with contemporary global cultural relevance.

The Most Fearless IMDB Link

Shipwreck

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Director: Javier Gomez Serrano
2010 • 60 Min • Spain

Shipwreck is the story of Johor and Salam, men that work at the ship yards breaking vessels in Chittagong, a coastal province of Bangladesh. Bengali men struggling to raise their families against a backdrop of labor uncertainty, health hazards unknown to us, and salaries that make them the most competitive labor force in the world.

Johor is a cutter, a crafted worker that slices down the ships day and night. He sits at the top of the job positions in the yard. Salam is older but strong, he is also a leader within the collective house he lives at. The two of them represent the whole of the man power assembled in the yards. This is their story. Shipwreck is the battleground where barehanded men dismantle these gigantic ships. Their work is considered a great asset to the country’s economy taking into account the high price of steel in the world market. For them workers, is a good way to ensure their children’s future and they believe, in time, their working conditions will only improve. Shipwreck is a modern version of David against Goliath. Where the real giant David must bring down is a system oblivious to the human beings which it is supposed to serve, represented in this film by the hopeless enormous carcasses wrecked at a soiled beach. An industry breaking down more than 500 large ships a year that is unlikely to stop while there are ships to be broken, unpaid and unprepared workers eager to break them, and large amounts of money to be made amidst the hypocrisy of the western world.

Heart to Head

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Director: Gem Munro
2013 • 123 Min • Canada

Education is the most powerful weapon in fighting what Gandhi called the worst form of violence – poverty. This documentary film takes a close look at how Amarok Society has empowered some of the poorest, most oppressed mothers in the world to lead that fight. Rather than teach children, Amarok Society teaches wholly uneducated Muslim mothers in the slums of the world’s worst city to be neighborhood teachers – achieving what many said would be impossible. ‘Heart to Head’ reveals a rarely-seen world, providing an extraordinary view into these terrible slums and the lives within them as it follows Amarok Society’s quest to open a new school, and traces the journey of women who reshape their lives and their neighborhoods through education.

Flip The Coin – A Tower Of Promises

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Director: Tom Heinemann
2008 • 57 Min • Sweden/Denmark

The world have never been bigger. In seconds we can connect. From Scandinavia to Bangladesh.

Globalization can create economic growth even in the poorest countries of the world. Good for some but not for all. The gap between the rich and the poor has never been bigger: 980 million people are starving every day, Just 1000 people own on average more than 4 billion Dollars, 850 million people suffers from chronic malnutrition. Who are the winners and who are the losers?

This documentary shows how Ericsson and Telenor for more than a decade have neglected to live up to their own Code Of Conduct. Fatal accidents, child labor, hazardous working conditions and environmental disasters are everyday occurrences in their factories in Bangladesh. Thousands of poor workers, work for subcontractors to Ericsson and Telenor (Two of the largest telecommunication companies in the world). These multinational companies guarantees to the public and their shareholders, that the employees and suppliers have to live up to the most basic human rights and environmental standards. “A Tower Of Promises” documents how these guarantees are nothing more than empty words.

Sixteen Decisions

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Director: Gayle Ferraro
2000 • 60 Min • USA

Sixteen Decisions is a documentary film directed and produced by Gayle Ferraro, exploring the impact of the Grameen Bank on impoverished women in Bangladesh. The bank provides micro loans of about $60 each to the poor, as well as promoting a social charter that gave the film its title. The film was Gayle Ferraro’s first, begun in 1997 and completed in 2000. It has been shown at multiple film festivals, including the 2001 New York International Independent Film and Video Festival and 2002 Women With Vision Film Festival. It won the Bronze Award for Women’s Issues at the Houston Worldfest, and was broadcast by PBS in 2003.

Buy this doc.

Fish Unwrapped

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Director: Alex Thomson
2011 • 45 Min • UK

Channel 4 News presenter Alex Thomson unwraps one of the nation’s favorite dishes. Through DNA testing he discovers the fish in fish and chips may not be quite as advertised and exposes how one major supermarket is misleading consumers about the sustainability of the cod it sells.

The apparent health benefits of fish have driven demand amongst consumers and made it a lucrative multi-billion pound industry in the UK. But Thomson reveals the chemical additives used in some fish products. He also uncovers that packaged fish on sale in the chilled section of the supermarket may have been frozen for nine months before it’s defrosted and sold to consumers – some of whom assume this is fresh.

Dispatches goes undercover to investigate the prawn industry in Bangladesh, which supplies Britain with several thousand tones of prawns each year, and finds a dangerously unregulated industry. Secret filming reveals serious hygiene issues and the use of a widely banned pesticide to combat disease in prawn ponds. The report also exposes how prawns are injected with a dirty bulking liquid to increase weight – and profit.

Hoolock Gibbons – Grasping the Last Branch

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Director:  Elliott Haimoff
2009 • 50 Min • USA

The Hoolock Gibbons of Bangladesh have been brought to the brink of extinction by the relentless destruction of their forested habitats throughout the country, even in the most highly protected forest reserves. This species used to number in the tens of thousands, but are now down to the last 200 or so.

 

Swamp Tigers

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Director: Mike Herd
2001 • 50 Min • UK

Entangled, mangrove forest on the Bay of Bengal is the kingdom of a creature rarely seen by humans. One of the most efficient predators on Earth, this animal is feared as a killer and a man-eater – the legendary swamp tiger. These tigers are so elusive that all attempts to track them in these impenetrable swamps ended in failure.

More than a decade ago, cameraman Mike Herd captured the swamp tiger on film for the first time. It was an extraordinary breakthrough, the first glimpse into the secret life of the least known tiger in the world – the swamp tiger of the Bangladeshi Sundarbans.

This first tiger footage was tantalizing and all-too-brief, but for Mike it was enough to stir a passion. He resolved to return and unravel the secrets of this mysterious creature. The Sundarbans are remote and dangerous, so Mike will need an armed guard day and night. Somewhere in those 6,000 square miles, 10,000 square kilometers, are a few hundred tigers, yet the only way to track them is on foot.

Four mighty rivers rise in the Himalayas and pass through Bangladesh, dividing into small streams and channels to pour into the sea in the Bay of Bengal. They form an intricate mangrove delta, a collection of sand banks and mud held together by entangled roots.

Flood waters carry human victims downstream; corpses are washed onto the muddy banks of the Sundarbans giving some tigers the taste for human flesh. Every year up to a hundred people are killed by tigers, yet for the poor there is no alternative. The fishermen spend months on-board their boats trying to avoid the bandits who steal their catch and their belongings.

On the muddy bank there is the first tell-tale trace of the tiger – a recent set of pugmarks leading deep into the forest. Then more evidence – huge claw marks on a tree. The air is thick with a pungent smell of tiger. Mike believes it must be a tigress.

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Documentary Films on Bangladesh – Part 3

Documentary Films on Bangladesh by non-Bangladeshi Film Makers

This is the third part on documentary films on Bangladesh. First part of documentary films on Bangladesh listed nine documentaries. Second part of documentary films on Bangladesh listed nine more docs. Nine more documentaries added to this list. The lists are  in random order.

Development in Bad Waters

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Director: Crelis Rammelt
2013 • 61 Min • Netherlands

In Bangladesh, millions of rural poor are currently drinking water that is contaminated with high levels of arsenic. Although the problem was described as the worst mass poisoning in history, little has been achieved to resolve it. Among the few projects that are being implemented, even fewer have managed to reach the poor and to implement water supplies and health support provisions that last. The Arsenic Mitigation and Research Foundation has implemented an integrated and participatory program that links research with project activities in a manner that reflects the priorities of local communities. More info about Development in Bad Waters here.

Le telephone portable de Halima

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Director: Olga Prud’homme
2007 • 52 Min • France

This story takes place in Bangladesh. We are in May 2000. I have come to follow the arrival of a cell phone in Halima’s life, a village woman. Halima got this cell phone thanks to a loan from the Grameen Bank, the “bank of the poor”. It is the first phone ever found in this village. It should benefit to Halima as well as to all the village people.

January 2007: back to Halima. Has the wager of professor Yunus, who in between has been rewarded with the Peace Nobel Prize, succeeded? Can a cell phone change a destiny? Can micro credit help the poor to jump above “poverty line”? What happened to Halima and to her cell phone?

Le telephone portable de Halima or Halima’s Cellphone is in Bangla with French Subtitle.

The Dust of His Feet

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Director: Janet Best
2010 • 62 Min • Canada

The film brings us into the world of two Bangladeshi folk musicians. Matal Rajjak Dewan, the ‘drunk poet’, is honored with a shrine after his death. His student, Abdul Hai Dewan, calls his teacher ‘my Allah’ and continues to sing his songs of tolerance, mysticism and love at all-night celebrations and debates.

Matal Rajjak Dewan was an eccentric poet and singer who intrigued me the first and only time I saw him perform. When I returned to Bangladesh a year and a half later he was dead and his grave was a kind of shrine. Surprised, I set out to find out more and talked to his family, fans and, most of all, to his ardent student, the charismatic singer, Abdul Hai Dewan. For Abdul Hai, Matal Rajjak is more than just a teacher. “Nobody likes my songs,” he says unless Matal mixes in my soul and sings.” But Matal Rajjak is a puzzling figure who is described in many ways, a man who gave away all his money to beggars but who also beat people.

Way Back Home

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Director: Supriyo Sen
2003 • 120 Mins • India

In this road-movie, the filmmaker follows his parents on their way ‘back home’ to Bangladesh. After the Partition of India in 1947, East Pakistan, (today’s Bangladesh) witnessed enormous atrocities. Rape, brutal killings and the separation of families, friends and neighbors literally happened overnight. After 50 years of living as ‘refugees’ in India, the filmmaker’s parents return to their home villages to see what remains of childhood memories. The journey is dangerous and challenging for those behind the camera as those in front of it. Filming takes place without the official permission of Bangladesh, which can provoke nasty reprisals. The urge to film his parents visiting home for what might be the last time in their lives though, was a great motivator. Emotional but not melodramatic, the film embodies the story of one family representing the faith of thousands of others in India, Bangladesh or Pakistan. Poetic in approach, with beautiful songs and a measured pace, this journey is one of the rare documentaries that played for weeks in cinemas in Kolkata, India.

The Bangladesh Story

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Director: Faris Kermani
1989 • 78 Min • UK

The Bangladesh Story, a three-part series, broadcast on Channel 4, tells the story of Bangladesh from its creation to military rule of 1990s.

Part 1 – Under Three Flags – Bengal was the heartland of British India, and in 1947 it became the east wing of Pakistan, after much violence. East Pakistanis felt they still suffered from domination by their west wing, and Pakistan’s first general election in 1970 confirmed this. A second Bengali bid for independence resulted in nationhood.

Part 2 – The Mujib Years – The East Bengali majority in the 1970 election caused a civil war which shocked the world. The superpowers stayed on the sidelines, but the intervention of the Indian army ensured the existence of Bangladesh. Mujibur Rahman took power, but lost popular support within three years, and a new period of government by the armed forces began.

Part 3 – Military Rules – 80% of the population has dropped below the poverty line, while rulers come and go, usually through violent coups. The last program in the series looks at some different people’s attempts to find solutions to their country’s problems.

Between the Tides

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Directors: Tyler Quintano & Nick Manning
2009 • 50 Min • USA

The sea level is rising at an alarming 3.14 mm per year in the Bay of Bengal due to climate change. An estimated 125 million people may be rendered homeless in India and Bangladesh by the end of this century. What are their options? How long do people have? Between the Tides is a feature-length documentary film that explores the human cost of climate change and those living on the front lines of sea level rise in the Ganges Delta.

The Micro Debt

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Director: Tom Heinemann
2011 • 57 Min • Denmark

Microcredit has been hailed as the #1 solution to eradicate poverty. In December 2007, the Danish independent journalist and film maker, Tom Heinemann met with a woman by the name of Jahanara – living in a slum-like house two hours drive outside the capital of Bangladesh, Dhaka. Shortly before she had sold her house to pay her weekly installment\’s. For months, she had been intimidated, harassed and abused by the members of her loan group and by the loan officers from the various Micro Finance Institutions, who had given her the loans. The meeting with Jahanara was only the first in a long string of interviews with poor people in Bangladesh, India and in the state of Oaxaca in Mexico. The Microcredit loan-takers told the same story over and over again: Most of them had numerous loans in various NGO’s and Micro Finance Institutions – and many must take new loans to cover the old ones. They paid annual interest rates ranging from 30-200%, and they are under extreme social pressure from the other members of their groups.

Strong Bodies Fight

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Director:  William Donaruma
2011 • 65 Min • USA

“Strong bodies fight, that weak bodies may be nourished.” This is the motto of the Notre Dame Boxing Team, which annually hosts an intramural charity tournament called “The Bengal Bouts” to support the Holy Cross development efforts in the poverty-stricken country of Bangladesh. Founded by legendary football coach Knute Rockne in 1931 and perpetuated by 80 years of blood, sweat, and tears, the Bengal Bouts represent a sacred tradition of dedicated students lacing up their gloves in a fight much larger than the ring in which they box.

In May 2008, a group of 5 student boxers embarked on a journey across the world to witness the Bangladesh missions. What they encountered was not what they had anticipated. Where they had expected to find weakness, they found strength; where they thought they would find despair, they found great resolve. They learned that the Bangladeshi people were not helpless victims to be aided but change-agents to be empowered. From the claustrophobic slums of Dhaka city to the remote tribal villages of Bangladesh, these students witnessed a world of poverty seldom seen in films or media – a world of hope.

Now 80 years in the making, Strong Bodies Fight is the unique and inspirational story of three groups of people – the Notre Dame boxers, the Holy Cross Missionaries, and the people of Bangladesh – reaching out across the globe to join forces as one Team in the FIGHT against poverty.

The Akram Tree

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Directors: Francesco Cabras & Alberto Molinari
2011 • 81 Min • Italy

The Akram Tree is a journey through the personal and professional world of the British-Bangladeshi choreographer and dancer Akram Khan. My intelligence is in my body says Akram himself, a body built by acute observations of the reality, legends, and unceasing work here well represented by Gnosis, a pièce realized in collaboration with seven artists expressly discovered in different parts of the world. These traditions and experimentations from India, Japan, Pakistan, England, Egypt, Iraq and Bangladesh collaborate together to create a work between classic Indian Kathak and contemporary dance. The film portrays the story of this peculiar human and artistic adventure often transcending the narration for the sake of a more visionary look influenced by the location where the documentary has been shot: the futuristic and conflictive city of Abu Dhabi with its desertic and metaphysical surroundings.