immigrants

Watch BEYOND THE BORDER on Global Voices on PBS WORLD

Over the past decade, thousands of Latinos seeking una vida mejor (“a better life”) have migrated to Kentucky, finding low-paying service jobs. As the Latino communities have swelled, so too have xenophobia and discrimination. BEYOND THE BORDER traces the painful transition made by four sons who leave their family in Mexico and fight cultural, class and language barriers in the United States.

Watch a preview below:

BEYOND THE BORDER airs Sunday, June 21 at 10:00 PM on Global Voices on PBS WORLD (check local listings).

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Friday, June 19th, 2009 All Video, Global Voices No Comments

Watch AT HOME IN UTOPIA Tonight on Independent Lens

A home of your own: that’s the American dream. But what happens when the dreamers are immigrants, factory workers and Communists? Director Michal Goldman traces the history of “The Coops,” a cooperative apartment complex built in the Bronx by Jewish garment workers. The film tracks the rise and fall of the community from the 1920s into the 1950s, bearing witness to lives lived across barriers of race, convention and sometimes even common sense.

“[Michal Goldman] has recaptured a daring social experiment, limning its idealism on race relations and social justice and its ultimately fatal embrace of Communist doctrine,” The New York Times.

Check out the trailer below:

AT HOME IN UTOPIA airs tonight at 10:00 PM on Independent Lens on PBS (check local listings)

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Tuesday, April 28th, 2009 All Video, Independent Lens 2 Comments

MADE IN L.A. Screens on Capitol Hill

Sally Jo Fifer, ITVS; filmmaker Almudena Carracedo; Congressmember Diane Watson; filmmaker Robert Bahar; and Simon Kilmurry, American Documentary | POV.

Filmmakers Almudena Carracedo and Robert Bahar.

Congresswoman Diane Watson applauds MADE IN L.A. during her opening remarks.

Filmmakers Almudena Carracedo and Robert Bahar went to Washington, D.C. last week for a screening on Capitol Hill of MADE IN L.A., which documents the lives, struggle and personal transformation of three Latina immigrants working in garment factories. This event included comments and conversation with ?Congresswoman Diane Watson; ?Congressman Luis Gutierrez, chair of the Hispanic Congressional Caucus’ Immigration Taskforce; Frank Sharry, founder and executive director of America’s Voice; Bill Mefford, director of civil and human rights for the United Methodist Church and a leader of the Interfaith Immigration Coalition; and Angela Kelley, director of the Immigration Policy Center at the American Immigration Law Foundation, with brief opening remarks presented by Ted A. Garcia, senior vice president, television content, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and Sally Jo Fifer, president and CEO of ITVS. Simon Kilmurry, executive director of American Documentary, Inc. | P.O.V., was also in attendance. Read the filmmakers report below for an account of this screening.

For the last year and a half, since our broadcast premiere on PBS’s P.O.V., we have been traveling with MADE IN L.A.––co-produced by Semilla Verde Productions, Inc., ITVS and American Documentary, Inc. | P.O.V. We wanted to put a human face on the many issues that intersect in the film: immigration and immigrant workers, labor rights, “sweatfree” organizing and women’s empowerment. In recent months, as immigration reform has returned to the national dialogue, we have put special emphasis on providing MADE IN L.A. as a tool to humanize immigrants’ stories.

We have recently launched a May Day Community Screening Campaign with national organizations in an effort to put a human face on the issues of immigration, immigrant workers’ rights, and supporting humane immigration reform. This Capitol Hill screening was part of this effort––in the midst of the Hispanic Congressional Caucus’s Historic Family Unity listening tour, congressional and community leaders came together to discuss the film and the current state of the immigration debate.

Congresswoman Diane Watson opened the event, which was sponsored by the Congressional Entertainment Industries Caucus, which she chairs.

“As we watch MADE IN L.A., I’d like you to take in the journey that these courageous women made staring directly into the face of adversity and remember one word: perseverance… You’ll see that Lupe and Maura and Maria could have been any of us if born under different circumstances. It is my hope that we as lawmakers and concerned citizens will take the information from today’s film and discussion and apply it to our continuing fight for fair wages, for decent working conditions, and a safe place to work without the threats of abuse regardless of one’s immigration status,” Watson said.

Congressmember Luis Gutierrez, chair of the Hispanic Congressional Caucus Immigration Taskforce spoke about the Historic Family Unity listening tour and how these experiences have shaped his views on the need for immigration reform. He commented how he cried when he saw the film and later added: “MADE IN L.A. is a breathtaking and deeply touching depiction of the human cost of our immigration crisis. I’m thrilled my colleagues and I had the opportunity to screen this movie on Capitol Hill. I urge anyone who is uncertain about the need for humane reform to see this movie.”

Frank Sharry, founder and executive director of America’s Voice, framed the film with passion and humanity: “MADE IN L.A. is a beautiful film… that will challenge all of us to continue to stretch so that America becomes what it might yet be rather than what it’s recently become. And when we do, I think the ‘stars’ of the movie will make all of us feel proud that we were made in America.”

The panel that followed the screening explored some of the previous efforts to pass immigration related legislation, and highlighted the wonderful work of the Interfaith Immigration Coalition, Immigration Policy Center, America’s Voice and many other organizations that are working to facilitate a national dialogue around the issues of immigration and immigrant workers.

We are happy and honored that MADE IN L.A. was able to contribute, even in a small way, to this national dialogue, and that both the event and the publicity around it helped get the film into the hands of lawmakers, and policy professionals. We were touched by ITVS President and CEO Sally Jo Fifer’s comment that “MADE IN L.A. represents exactly that kind of deep, authentic filmmaking that breaks new ground and brings us new understanding.”

-Filmmakers Almudena Carracedo and Robert Bahar

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Thursday, April 9th, 2009 ITVS Funding, Special Events 1 Comment

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