Here's another quick update from El Salvador regarding a highly contested mine and what life is like for anti-mining activists. The story of one of the murdered activists mentioned in this clip, Marcelo Rivera, was included in Jamie Moffett's documentary Return to El Salvador. See my interview from last summer with Jamie here. This video clip is three minutes.
As many of you are probably aware, President Obama is currently in the middle of a rare five-day trip to Latin America with stops in Brazil, Chile and El Salvador. There's been a great deal of discussion about why Obama chose these three countries, while excluding others, like Argentina.
El Salvador, for its part, is an interesting itinerary choice. It's the smallest of the three countries comprising the troubled "Northern Triangle" of Central America, along with Guatemala and Honduras. What the three nations have in common, beyond geographical proximity, is rampant violence, much of it connected to the drug trade. But with Guatemala's upcoming election, Obama wouldn't want to be seen as a meddler, and with Honduras' recent coup, the perceived message of a visit there would be messy as well.
So El Salvador it is, a tiny country not far away that many of us know very little about. But an estimated 700 Salvadorans flee their country every day, many of them winding up in the U.S. Now is as good a time as any to plug my friend Jamie Moffett's documentary, Return to El Salvador. It's narrated by Martin Sheen (a decidedly less crazy Sheen) and has been endorsed by Nobel Peace Prize-winning Archbishop Desmond Tutu, among others. The documentary takes a look at the history of El Salvador, and particularly its civil war, and how these events are shaping modern realities in El Salvador and in our own backyard.
I interviewed Jamie about the project last summer, and today he called to let me know the film is currently screening in El Salvador (were President Obama to squeeze a screening into his schedule, I'm sure he'd get a better understanding of the country). But luckily for the rest of us, the film has also been added to Hulu and is now among the top ten documentaries featured there. I encourage you to check it out, but to whet your appetite, the trailer is below.
Not too long ago I was visiting some friends in Philadelphia to watch a soccer game, when, as sometimes happens, I got to talking about the mining industry and what it means for the community where I grew up in Guatemala. A friend of a friend told me about another friend of his I just had to meet: a documentary filmmaker from Philly who was passionate about the same sort of thing.
As it turns out, that filmmaker was Jamie Moffett. Like me, Jamie is an Eastern University alum. He recently completed and is now promoting a film called Return to El Salvador, featuring the story of an anti-mining activist who had been killed for speaking out, as part of a broader picture of what has been happening in the country as a whole. It’s narrated by Martin Sheen and endorsed by heavy hitters like Ron Sider and Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Needless to say, it’s a very important - and at times quite disturbing - film.
What are the next steps for you and for the film?
We screen a portion of the film June 15 for Canadian Parliament at the request of MP McKay, and specifically the clips related to mining and corporate accountability. Following that, we present week-long multi-city screenings in Canada starting with out World Premiere at Toronto's Underground Cinema in Chinatown. Screenings in Ottawa, Montreal and Vancouver follow.
In the United States we are working on lining up a few cities. One of our options that we’re currently developing is a number of one-week runs around the country. We will be doing it in sort of a communal way where we agree to acquire the theater and then faith groups or social justice groups can choose to sponsor a night. They get half the tickets where you get a discount and turn it into a fundraiser if they want. But more importantly, they’re keeping the theater open to folks who may not be in on the story but can walk into the theater and get exposed to it.
We have no backer, no big money in the back pocket. I've had to sell my home to complete production, but I believe in the film and know that this critically important story needed to be told and shared with as wide an audience as possible.
There are a lot of folks like me who want to be the change we want to see in the world, but we simply don’t have the information. I’m happy I can say I spent this time of my life gathering the information and making this story. In a way, it was an education, like going to grad school. It took eighteen months and cost as much as a masters degree! Return to El Salvador is about listening; enabling people to deeply consider how the situation got this way, and now with this knowledge how we, together, can take action.