Subject: STAND WITH UKRAINE Fundraising Screening

STAND WITH UKRAINE Fundraising Screening

We deplore the Russian military action in recent weeks to invade and lay terror to Ukraine. We stand in solidarity with Ukraine and all Russians who oppose this assault.


Cinema has the power to inform, question and challenge. We would therefore like to share two upcoming events being run by our partners. 


A screening of THE EARTH IS BLUE AS AN ORANGE with a Q&A will raise funds to provide humanitarian relief in Ukraine.


A Cambridge Festival screening will highlight the work of HRC Memorial, a key human rights organisation operating inside Russia.

THE EARTH IS BLUE AS AN ORANGE


2020, 74 min.

Directed by: Iryna Tsilyk

With: Ganna Gladka, StanIslav Gladky, Anastasiia Trofymchuk, Myroslava Trofymchuk.

6.45pm Wednesday 23 March 2022


Arts Picturehouse Cambridge

Exquisitely shot and bold in its approach, director Iryna Tsilyk’s THE EARTH IS BLUE AS AN ORANGE follows single mother Anna and her four children as they document their lives under siege in Donbas, Ukraine.


This exceptional documentary won the World Cinema Documentary Award at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival. With miraculous insight, the film observes a family—and a filmmaker— who cope with war by using their cameras and working in tandem to create meaning and to stay human.


The film will be introduced by Dr Rory Finnin, Associate Professor of Ukrainian Studies at the University of Cambridge. Q&A to follow the screening.


The full ticket price will go to WithUkraine.org, an online global platform vetted by Cambridge Ukrainian Studies and built by the Embassy of Ukraine in the United Kingdom to provide urgent humanitarian relief to families on the ground in Ukraine.

"Enemies of the people" once again: why do Russian authorities want to shut down Memorial?


2-4pm Friday 8 April 2022


Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (CRASSH), SG1, Alison Richard Building 7 West Road, CB3 9DT

Memorial is the oldest human rights organization in Russia, one that has become a symbol of the civil society. On November 11, 2021 the Prosecutor General's Office of the Russian Federation filed a lawsuit with the Supreme Court for the liquidation of the International Memorial. In addition, Moscow’s Prosecutor's Office appealed to the Moscow City Court with a request to liquidate the ‘Memorial’ Human Rights Centre. The reason is the repeated violation of the ‘foreign agents’ law. The Human Rights Centre is additionally accused of justifying extremist and terrorist activity.


The documentary was produced by TV Rain, one of Russia’s few remaining independent media. TV Rain interviewed those who had stood at the foundation of Memorial a couple of years before the dissolution of the Soviet Union. It tells the story of a small group of dissidents who were able to gather and preserve the forbidden memories of the Gulag and speculates about what could happen to the database of the victims of Soviet persecution if the organization is shut down.


The screening features an opening speech from Nobel laureate Dmitry Muratov, as well as a short discussion with human rights defenders Anna Dobrovolskaya and Luke Harding afterward.


Anna Dobrovolskaya is an executive director of Memorial Human Rights Centre and a human rights activist. She worked as a chief executive officer at Human Rights House Voronezh between 2009 and an Editor at the German-Russian Exchange from 2017 to 2021. Anna represents a young generation of human rights defenders both in her vision and actions. In her work she focuses on knowledge-sharing, valuing diversity and creating impact opportunities beyond finger-pointing.


Luke Harding is a journalist, writer, and award-winning correspondent with the Guardian. He has reported from Delhi, Berlin, and Moscow, and covered wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and Syria. Between 2007 and 2011, he was the Guardian’s Moscow bureau chief until the Kremlin deported him from the country in February 2011. He is the author of several books, among those are Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win and Shadow State: Murder, Mayhem and Russia's Remaking of the West.


Cambridge Film Festival is presented by Cambridge Film Trust, a registered charity with a mission to foster film culture and education for the benefit of the public, in Cambridge and the Eastern region but also throughout the UK

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