February 2011 Recommenda ons: Fair Trade
Transcription
February 2011 Recommenda ons: Fair Trade
February 2011 Recommenda2ons: Fair Trade Shopping, Books & Films Featured Program: PINCC, El Salvador This Month’s Recommenda2ons: ♀ Fair Trade Shopping ♀ Books ♀ Videos & Films Fair Trade Shopping Our thanks to Carolyn Mayers for Fair Trade Shopping Recommenda<ons Shade grown organic, fair trade coffee http://www.motherearthcoffeeco.com/ Sustainable and organic agricultural practices protect the rain forests and enhance the land and the lives of the coffee growers. Looking forward to summer? How about a hammock crafted from t‐shirt factory waste? http://www.globalexchangestore.org/Hammock‐p/esms‐ham.htm Hand‐painted boxes, etc. http://www.peopleoAhopecrafts.org/products.php?cat=11 More hand‐painted, very pretty boxes, and cute pencil boxes for kids http://www.oneworldprojects.com/products/el‐salvador‐wood.shtml Books Fic2on The Weight of All Things by Sandra Benitez Set in El Salvador during the civil war of the 1980s, Benitez's third novel seamlessly blends fact with imagination, evoking the trauma of war more vividly than any newspaper account . . . Those who seek a deeper understanding of Latin American conAlict. . . will Aind the novel especially gratifying. (Publisher’s Weekly). Nonfic2on Salvador by Joan Didion In late 1982 the novelist Joan Didion spent two weeks in El Salvador at the ghastly height of its civil war. Didion delivers an anatomy of that country's particular brand of terror–its mechanisms, rationales, and intimate relation to United States foreign policy from battleAields to body dumps, interviews a puppet president, and considers the distinctly Salvadoran grammar of the verb "to disappear." ‐‐From the publisher. From Grandmother to Granddaughter: Salvadoran Women's Stories by Michael Gorkin Gorkin, an American psychologist, teamed with two Salvadoran women psychologists in 2000 to explore the life histories of three generations of women in El Salvador. Their recollections of childhood, courtship, marriage, and child rearing are conveyed against the backdrop of the social upheaval of El Salvador's 12‐year civil war that ended in 1992. The subjects‐‐grandmother, mother, and granddaughter‐‐reAlect the range of Salvadoran social and economic strata. ‐‐Booklist Films & Videos PINCC: STOPPING CERVICAL CANCER IN CENTRAL AMERICA h6p://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e7zE5wNZBlE Prevention International: No Cervical Cancer (see www.PINCC.org) trains doctors and nurses in developing countries in a simple screening method to see and treat the precursors to cervical cancer ‐‐ the leading cancer killer of women in the developing world. This video is all about PINCC and its program in Central America. PINCC also operates in Africa and India. Return to El Salvador is an intimate documentary that tells—mainly through candid interview—the story of the individuals and communities effected by El Salvador’s brutal civil war that ended nearly two decades ago. Return to El Salvador, narrated by Martin Sheen, is the latest documentary from director Jamie Moffett, who explores the reconstruction of El Salvador, post‐civil war. Released January 2010. http://www.returntoelsalvador.com/about Salvador. 1986 war drama Ailm which tells the story of an American journalist in El Salvador covering the Salvadoran civil war. The Ailm, written by Oliver Stone and Richard Boyle, was directed by Stone. Stone's portrayal is sympathetic towards the left wing peasant revolutionaries, but deplores their killing of prisoners in a crucial scene. He is strongly critical towards the U.S.‐supported right wing military and the allied death squads, focusing on their assassination of four American churchwomen, including Jean Donovan. Stone's portrayal of the Catholic Church as a force for justice reAlects events of the time, exempliAied in the political sermon of Archbishop Óscar Romero, which is based almost word‐for‐word on the speech Romero made before he was assassinated by a death squad. The Ailm was nominated for two Academy Awards: Best Actor in a Leading Role (Woods) and Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen (Stone and Boyle). ‐‐Wikipedia. Innocent Voices Voces Innocentes. 2004 film about a young boy, in an effort to have a normal childhood in 1980's El Salvador, caught up in a dramatic Aight for his life as he desperately tries to avoid the war which is raging all around him. Scars of Memory: An oral history of the 1932 massacre of 10,000 El Salvadorans, a trauma that has resonated through six decades of military rule, until the 1992 peace accords ended a brutal, 12‐year civil war. (2002).