Dear Mandela Screening and Discussion
Posted by on October 01, 2012
Dear Mandela Screening and Discussion
Media Mobilizing Project
Tuesday, October 9, 2012 from 6:30 PM to 9:00 PM
Philadelphia, PA
http://dearmandelaphilly.eventbrite.com/
Event Details
The Media Mobilizing Project and Put People First PA are proud to host the Philadelphia screening of Dear Mandela, a film that tells the untold story of South Africa’s largest social movement.
The film screening will be followed by a discussion with Zodwa Nsibande and Mnikelo Ndabankulu – two members of Abahlali baseMjondolo who are in the US for a national tour of the film – as well as Dara Kell and Christopher Nizza, the filmmakers.
$5-$25 sliding scale admission
More info on the film: http://www.dearmandela.com
**More about Dear Mandela**
When Nelson Mandela was elected President of South Africa, his government was faced with a seemingly insurmountable task: providing a better life for those who had suffered under apartheid. The cornerstone of Mandela’s ‘unbreakable promise’ was an ambitious plan to ensure housing for all. Eighteen years later, as the number of families living in slums has doubled, a frightening tale of betrayal is unfolding.
The government is trying to ‘eradicate the slums’ by evicting shack dwellers from their homes at gunpoint, in scenes eerily reminiscent of apartheid-era forced removals. Determined to stop the bulldozers that are destroying homes and communities, a new social movement made up of the nation’s poorest is challenging the evictions on the streets and in the courts. DEAR MANDELA is the remarkable story of Abahlali BaseMjondolo – Zulu for ‘people of the shacks’. It is considered the largest movement of the poor to emerge in post-apartheid South Africa.
DEAR MANDELA brings us into the everyday lives of three dynamic leaders of the movement. Determined to stop the evictions, Mazwi, Zama and Mnikelo met with their communities by candlelight to study and debate new housing legislation. The shack dwellers discovered that the innocuous-sounding Slums Act legalized mass evictions and violated the rights enshrined in the country’s landmark Constitution. They challenged the Slums Act all the way to the highest court in the land – the hallowed Constitutional Court.
More information about Abahlali baseMjondolo is available here: http://www.abahlali.org/node/16
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- Government and Community Relations Community of Practice – Feb 20
- The Facing Project Webinar – Jan 30 or 31
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