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Amnesty International Film Workshop

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Presentation on theme: "Amnesty International Film Workshop"— Presentation transcript:

1 Amnesty International Film Workshop
Good Amnesty International Film Workshop

2 Amnesty International
Welcome Amnesty International Ask if anyone has heard of Amnesty and can explain what Amnesty does. Amnesty is a movement of ordinary people – like you and me. We work in lots of different ways to protect people’s human rights. Amnesty is independent of any religion, ideology or political party. Amnesty International does not take sides in conflicts but supports individuals wherever their rights to freedom and fair treatment are denied.

3 Location map: Germany Map from BBC country profile

4 Thinking about the film 1
By what stages does Halder become increasingly involved in Nazism? Theatrical release poster

5 Thinking about the film 2
How are you encouraged to feel sympathy for Halder despite the wrong choices he makes?

6 Thinking about the film 3
How are Maurice’s human rights gradually stripped away?

7 AFTER THE FILM – Warm up activity
Discuss the film with your neighbours, and think of either: 1. A Question 2. A Fact or 3. A Feeling

8 Amnesty International
The film has shown people in Nazi Germany who weren’t able to enjoy all of their human rights. Sadly there are people all around the world who have their rights denied in one way or another. That’s why Amnesty International exists – to help people when they can’t enjoy all of their human rights. The candle and barbed wire is our logo. Ask the audience what they think the candle and barbed wire stand for. The logo comes from the Chinese proverb: ‘Better to light a candle than to curse the darkness’.

9 More about Amnesty International
We are ordinary people from across the world standing up for humanity and human rights. Our purpose is to protect individuals wherever justice, fairness, freedom and truth are denied. 2.8 million members and supporters worldwide 260,000 in the UK Over 800 groups in schools and colleges in the UK – Amnesty youth groups are a dynamic network who campaign for human rights, raise awareness and fundraise in their schools and local communities. They might write letters to governments to ask for the release of someone who has been unfairly imprisoned, meet their local MP to try and change laws in the UK, or hold a music event in their school to raise awareness about a human rights issue.

10 Take action www.amnesty.org.uk/youth www.amnesty.org.uk/education
Amnesty members take action to change things for the better and now you can too. In the film Good, we saw how many people including Jews weren’t able to enjoy all of their rights under the Nazis. Sadly today, there are still many people in the world who are unable to enjoy their rights and members of Amnesty take action on their behalf. Young people are some of the most committed and lively Amnesty activists. You can find out more including how to set up an Amnesty youth group on the website. The slide shows school students protesting outside the Nigerian High Commission in London in June 2009 on behalf of Patrick Okoroafor who has been in prison for 14 years since he was 14.

11 What are HUMAN RIGHTS? Ask audience if anyone can give an example of a human right – take a few suggestions Ask audience if anyone can define what we mean by human rights Human rights are what every human being needs to live a healthy and fulfilled life and to participate fully in society. They are entitlements – you have them just because you are human.  Human rights are: ·         universal – they apply to everyone equally ·         inalienable – they cannot be taken away from people ·         indivisible – they are all connected – failure to protect one right can lead to abuse of other rights, just as taking action to fulfil one right can lead to the fulfilment of other rights

12 Where do human rights come from?
In 1948, after the horrors of the second world war, and especially of the Holocaust, people from all over the world came together to draw up a list of rights people should have. These rights weren’t completely new ideas – they are underpinned by a set of common values that have been in societies, civilisations and religions throughout history, such as fairness, respect, equality, dignity and autonomy. The resulting document, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), was adopted by the countries of the UN in 1948 and it remains the most famous and most important of all human rights frameworks in the world. The photograph shows Eleanor Roosevelt, the most influential member of the UN Commission on Human Rights which drew up the UDHR.


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