Showing posts with label Genocides/Pogroms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genocides/Pogroms. Show all posts

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Screening of WE ARE YOUR VOICE

Pradarsh
screened the documentary
We Are Your Voice
on the birth anniversary of the American film actor
Bill Dana (b. 1924)

Friday, 5th October, 2012
5 p.m.
Auditorium, School of Biotechnology

Monday, February 13, 2012

Screening of OUTCAST: JEWISH PERSECUTION IN NAZI GERMANY

Pradarsh
screened the documentary
Outcast: Jewish Persecution in Nazi Germany
on
Friday, 17th February, 2012
at
4 p.m.
in the
School of Management Auditorium

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Screening of THE PIANIST

Pradarsh
screened
The Pianist
Winner of three Academy Awards
on
Friday, 10th February, 2012
at
3:30 p.m.
in the
Management School Auditorium

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Screening of INHERITANCE

Pradarsh
screened the acclaimed documentary-film
Inheritance
on
Friday, 3rd February, 2012
at
4 p.m.
in the
Management School Auditorium


Inheritance is an extraordinary, gut-wrenching account of the continuing effects of Nazi horrors on human souls. The Schindler's List portrayal of the Plaszow concentration camp and its brutal commander, Amon Goeth, set in motion the events recounted by this new documentary. Inheritance is a Holocaust film like no other. It tells the stories of two women with very different scars from the World War II genocide of Europe's Jews — whose sorrows and angers intersect in the haunting memory of one man.

Amon Goeth, Monika's father, was the commander of the Plaszow concentration camp. 

Now in her 60s, Monika Hertwig has struggled a lifetime with what she learned at age 11 — that her father, Amon Goeth, had not been killed in World War II like other soldiers, but was hanged as a war criminal when she was a baby. Over the years, she forced herself to learn more about "Amon," but when Spielberg's movie came out in 1993, Monica became, in her own words, "sick with the truth." Helen Jonas was 15 years old when she arrived with other Jews at the Plaszow camp in Poland, which was both a work camp and a death camp. In one of those strange twists of fate that exposed her to daily humiliations and beatings but probably saved her life, an imposing SS officer one day pointed at her and ordered, "I want her in my house." It was Amon Goeth. 

Monika begins Inheritance with a powerfully understated observation that few can make with equal authority: "Every father in a war should think about his children." Born in 1945 and only a year old when Polish authorities hanged Goeth, Monika never knew her father and had little curiosity about him. Many German children in those years were growing up without fathers — they had died fighting in the war — and no one talked about the war anyway. But this veil was strangely pierced when Monika, 11 years old, was told spitefully by her mother, "You are like your father and you will die like him!" 

Monika Hertwig

Monika, who had never gotten along with her mother, was so struck and puzzled by what her mother had said that she went to the woman she most trusted, her maternal grandmother. And for the first time, Monika heard the truth: "They hanged your father." Why? "Because he killed Jews." It's a testament to the postwar German will to forget that the young Monika knew nothing about the history of Jews in Germany or what happened to Jews during the war. So her grandmother began Monika's painful reeducation, telling her with guilt and shame about her father. A more terrible paternal legacy would be difficult to imagine.
As camp commander, Amon Goeth, a fanatical anti-Semite, held absolute authority of life and death over every inmate. Not content to oversee the death of thousands, he rode about on a white horse, personally killing, beating and torturing prisoners with apparent sadistic glee. Helen saw that look of animal pleasure whenever Goeth beat her while hurling vulgar invectives. Living in a basement room of the "beautiful villa" Goeth had built for himself and his wife, Helen daily heard the sounds of shots coming from the camp and witnessed innumerable acts of murder and brutality. Goeth made a point of personally shooting to death Helen's boyfriend, a young resistance fighter, just as the youth finished caring for and burying Helen's sick mother.

Helen Jonas

One ray of hope in Helen's bleak life was Oskar Schindler, who ran the factory that used the camp's inmates for forced labor — which saved those who did it from the gas chambers. As a maid in the Goeth household, she regularly saw Schindler who, with astounding equanimity, went from socializing with his friend, Goeth, to saving a thousand Jews, even pausing in his comings and goings to whisper to Helen that he would see to it that she would be all right. For a teenage girl living in the house of Nazi bestiality personified, these encouraging words were as mysterious as they were incredible.

Schindler did, in fact, ultimately save Helen and her sisters, and it was Helen's appearance in a German television documentary that captured Monika's attention. Here was a woman who had lived in her father's house in the years just before her birth. Here was a direct witness to what her father had become at Plaszow. And as important for Monika, here was someone who might shed light on her mother's state of mind as she, too, lived in that house, within gunshot sound of the concentration camp.

Helen at first resists the idea of meeting Monika. She can feel sorry for Monika but why should she be expected to help the child of a "perpetrator"? Eventually she comes to see that returning to Poland again and meeting Monica might serve her own emotional need still to find answers. The women arrange to meet at the Plaszow camp memorial to the unnamed thousands who died there. The meeting, with Helen's daughter Vivian accompanying her, must count as one of the most heartrending and searing evocations of the Holocaust ever filmed, especially when the women visit the "beautiful villa," still standing with its horrible memories for Helen and implacable reality for Monika.

And yet, for all the terror and despair evoked by the memory of Amon Goeth, Inheritance is ultimately a portrait of two brave and remarkably resilient women who bear witness to an unchangeable past in the name of a better future. 

"I first contacted Monika Hertwig, the daughter of Amon Goeth, to ask for her permission to use photographs of her father in a documentary we were producing for the 10th-anniversary Schindler's List DVD," says director James Moll. "She was charming. Easy to talk to. Then suddenly, Monika surprised me with a statement completely off the subject. She said, 'I am not my father.' That statement became the genesis of Inheritance."

Inheritance is a production of Allentown Productions, Moll's Los Angeles-based independent film company.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Screening of SCHINDLER'S LIST on International Holocaust Remembrance Day

Pradarsh
screened
Steven Spielberg's
critically acclaimed
Winner of 7 Academy Awards, 7 BAFTAs and 3 Golden Globes
on
Friday, 27th January, 2012
at
3 p.m.
in the
Management School Auditorium

Schindler's List, a Steven Spielberg film, is a cinematic masterpiece that has become one of the most honored films of all time. 

Winner of seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director, it also won every major Best Picture award and an exceptional number of additional honors. Among them were seven British Academy Awards; the Best Picture Awards from the New York Film Critics Circle, the National Society of Film Critics, the National Board of Review, the Producers Guild, the Los Angeles Film Critics, the Chicago, Boston and Dallas Film Critics; a Christopher Award; and the Hollywood Foreign Press Association Golden Globe Awards. Steven Spielberg was further honored with the Directors Guild of America Award.

The film presents the indelible true story of the enigmatic Oskar Schindler, a member of the Nazi party, womanizer, and war profiteer who saved the lives of more than 1,100 Jews during the Holocaust. It is the triumph of one man who made a difference, and the drama of those who survived one of the darkest chapters in human history because of what he did.

Directed by Steven Spielberg, the film, which also won Academy Awards for Screenplay, Cinematography, Music, Editing and Art Direction, stars an acclaimed cast headed by Liam Neeson, Ben Kingsley, Ralph Fiennes, Caroline Goodall, Jonathan Sagalle and Embeth Davidtz.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Screening of SPIELZEUGLAND and NIGHT & FOG

Pradarsh
screened the 
award winning French documentary 
Night & Fog
and the
Academy Award winning German short film Spielzeugland
on 
Friday, 20th January, 2012
at
4 p.m.
in the
Management School Auditorium

Monday, November 21, 2011

Screening of CLASSMATES OF ANNE FRANK

Pradarsh screened Eyal Boyers' documentary film Classmates of Anne Frank on Friday, 25th November, 2011 at the Management School Auditorium.

To comprehend fully the events in the life of Anne Frank, one must listen to the voices of the children who were there with her, of those who remember her.

Theo (Maurice) Coster, a famous games' creator from Israel, renews contact with five of his and Anne Frank's former classmates, only to discover an astonishing and confusing truth about the village where he was hiding during World War Two.

Set against his childhood locations in Amsterdam, Westerbork Transit Camp and their current homes in Holland and Israel, these former classmates discuss their relationships with Anne and how they survived the war. Through these discussions, the film takes a bold and illuminating look at the different Dutch attitudes towards the war years in the Netherlands and towards the Holocaust.

Anne Frank's diary confirms the tragedy of the Holocaust and continues to debunk Holocaust deniers. The documentation of Anne's classmates is not only illustrated through interviews and discussions between the classmates themselves, but also through photographs, archival footage, personal scrapbooks and letters and other new resources.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Screening of THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK


Pradarsh screened the 1959 classic The Diary of Anne Frank, which won three Oscars, on
Friday, 18th November, 2011.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Screening of SPRING 1941


Pradarsh screened the award winning feature film Spring 1941 on Friday, 4th November, 2011 at the Management School Auditorium. The film's screenplay writer, eminent playwright Motti Lerner had given a lecture at the Gautam Buddha University under the auspices of its Dramatics Club, Dishayan, on Friday, 23rd September, 2011.

A Film by Uri Barabash
(2008, 35 mm - 122 Minutes, DVD - 97 minutes, Color, English, cast: Joseph Fiennes, Clare Higgins, Kelly Harrison, Neve McIntosh, Maria Pakulnis)
In 1971, world famous Cellist Clara Plank returns to her homeland of Poland for the first time. She is the guest of honor in a gala concert to be held in her home town. But the familiar sights and faces are so powerful that her mind wonders to that one spring, 30 years earlier, when that terrible war came to destroy her world.

Spring 1941 is the story of the young Clara, her husband, and two daughters, a Jewish family seeking shelter as Nazis storm Poland. They find a safe house in the farm of Emilia, their local grocer. After her husband was taken to fight for his country and never came back, Emilia is all alone in the big house.
Under the horrors of the war and the agony of death that surrounds them, an impossible love triangle erupts.
The fragile arrangement, made only in order to live, is tested again and again.

Will love be enough to keep them alive? Is it love or is it survival?

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Screening of I'M STILL HERE


On Friday, 9th September, 2011, Pradarsh screened the documentary-film I'm Still Here to help the students understand that it is the responsibility of citizens in any society to learn to identify danger signals, and to know when to react to prevent genocide and the steps required.

I'm Still Here brings to life the diaries of young people who witnessed first-hand the horrors of the Holocaust. Through an emotional montage of sund and image, the film salutes this group of brave, young writers who refused to quitely disappear.

The stories of the young Holocaust victims come to life as read by some of today's most talented young actors. The documentary skillfully weaves together personal photos, handwritten pages and drawings from the diaries, and archival films. It complements them with original footage shot in Vilnius, Lithuania, in the remnants of the old jewish ghetto. The powerful journey is intensified through unobstrusive, evocative music scored by Grammy Award nominee Moby. 

I'm Still Here, produced and directed by the supremely talented Oscar nominee Lauren Lazin, was nominated for two Emmy Awards. 

It's trailer is available here.