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Tuesday, 31 May 2011 03:13 |
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Iranian journalist Maziar Bahari was held in a Tehran jail for 118 days in 2009. His arrest came as he worked for western media outlets, including BBC Panorama. In this analysis, Mr Bahari explains why the regime fears information, the internet and a free press.
Young Iranians speak out for the first time about life in a state where putting up a poster can get you jailed, releasing a rap CD calling for change gets you tortured and being gay is punishable by death. In a country where men and women can still be stoned to death for adultery, reporter Jane Corbin asks how much longer Iran can keep a lid on internal unrest as revolution and regime change sweep across the Middle East.
BBC
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Monday, 20 December 2010 19:16 |

A film by Kate Davis, David Heilbroner, Franco Sacchi. 74 minutes. 2009
America's 50-million strong Evangelical community is convinced that the world's future is foretold in Biblical prophecy - from the Rapture to the Battle of Armageddon.
This astonishing documentary explores their world - in their homes, at conferences, and on a wide-ranging tour of Israel.
By interweaving Christian, Zionist, Jewish and critical perspectives along with telling archival materials, the filmmakers probe the politically powerful - and potentially explosive - alliance between Evangelical Christians and Israel...an alliance that may set the stage for what one prominent Evangelical leader calls "World War III."
The documentary is structured around four stages of the apocalypse. 1) Rapture; 2)Tribulation; 3) Armageddon; 4) Millennialism;
Wikipedia | IMDb | Buy the film at Amazon
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Monday, 15 November 2010 00:29 |

A film by Rowan Al-Damen for Al Jazeera. 200 minutes. 2008
A series of four-part documentary produced by the Al-Jazeera Network Information, photographs and documents about the case of Palestine and the history of the catastrophe exposured for the first time.
"The Tragedy did not start in forty-eight, did not end in forty-eight." Series was filmed in six countries, including Palestine (inside and outside the Green Line).
Series history includes a detailed and comprehensive assessment of how a disaster will start the plot threads and then crush the revolution and then the ethnic cleansing of forty-eight and until the end by the Catastrophe continued till today, also contain a number of meetings of the most prominent thinkers and historians, journalists and Arabs, Israelis and foreign specialists on Palestine.
Al Nakba won the prize for the best long documentary about Palestine in Al Jazeera Fifth International Film Festival (Doha/Qatar) and the audience award in Amal Ninth Euro-Arab Film Festival (Santiago/Spain). It participated in other film festivals in Brazil, Argentina, Italy, Jordan, Egypt and Palestine.
Buy the film at Aido
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Sunday, 14 November 2010 23:45 |

A film by Karsten Kjær. 52 minutes. 2007
What do Danish cartoons tell us about contemporary democracy?
A lot it seems. Freedom of expression has always been a core principle of democracy. Imagining one without the other is unthinkable to most people. But what happens when one democratic right infringes on the rights of others? Is democracy itself shaped by religion? Are religions democratic? More importantly, is God democratic?
Bloody Cartoons is a documentary about how and why 12 drawings in a Danish provincial paper could whirl a small country into a confrontation with Muslims all over the world. He asks whether respect for Islam combined with the heated response to the cartoons is now leading us towards self-censorship. How tolerant should we be, he wonders, of the intolerant. And what limits should there be, if any, to freedom of speech in a democracy.
The director films in Lebanon, Iran, Syria, Qatar, France, Turkey and Denmark, talking to some of the people that played key roles during the cartoon crisis.
Wikipedia | IMDb | Why Democracy?
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