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Unpacking Development
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Toronto Events: Dealing with Dictators, Poverty Health & Human Rights, War Carpets

war-carpet

After a brief absence due to Unpacking Development getting hacked last week, we’re back up and ready to go again.  This week in Toronto there are a bunch of conferences and speakers around international development, health and politics:

Symposium: MEASURING THE IMPACT OF DOING GOOD
Wednesday, January 21
Joseph L. Rotman School of Management, 105 St. Geo
rge St

Symposium: EXTREME POVERTY, HUMAN RIGHTS & HEALTH
Thursday, January 22 - 12:30pm – 4pm
Music Room, Hart House, University of Toronto

Speaker: Dealing with Dictators
Thursday, January 22 - 7pm – 9pm
Hart House, 7 Hart House Circle, University of Toronto Debates Room (2nd floor)

I plan to attend the session on Extreme Poverty, Human Rights and Health so stay tuned for my impressions.

As well, there are some ongoing arts-based events related to conflict, design and African culture happening around the city.

Exhibit: Battleground - War Carpets from Afghanistan
Textile Museum of Canada, 55 Centre Avenue

Exhibit: Design for the Other 90%
Ontario College of Art & Design Professional Gallery, 100 McCaul Street

Theatre: Ubuntu (The Cape Town Project)
Tarragon Theatre, 30 Bridgman Avenue, Bathurst Street and Dupont Street

Check the Unpacking Development Events Calender to find out more details about these events and more every week.


January 17, 2009 | 7:01 AM Comments  0 comments

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AIDS Denialists in my Lobby

One of my favourite things about my apartment building is the informal recycling program in the lobby.  There’s a certain corner where you can leave behind slightly used goods for use by the next person, or find treasures of your own.
In a weird coincidence, the other day, as I leafed through a pile of books [...]

January 7, 2009 | 3:01 AM Comments  0 comments

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Unpacking from Rural Ontario

Living in Cobourg, a small rural community east of Toronto, over the past year I have found out that the occurrence of development events is much less frequent then when I was living in the city. Looking into what is going on in Northumberland County and the Kawartha’s, I came across ReFrame the Peterborough International Film Festival. The festival which is in its fifth year, runs from January 23rd to the 25th in Peterborough, Ontario just an hour and a half drive east of Toronto. The Festival, formerly known as the Travelling World Community Film Festival shows “independently made films [that] don’t just cover international issues; they re-frame them. They tell stories that often get little or no media coverage but need to be seen and heard by all members of our community. They provoke thought and offer insight”.

The films highlight countries from all around the world and showcase a diverse range of humanitarian issues from child labour, war, mining and rape to stories of hope and accomplishment. My top choices (with descriptions from the ReFrame website) to see were:

 The Dancing Forest/ La forêt danse

Released:  2008 UK
Film Length: 76 minutes
Directors: Brice Lainé

It seems rare these days to hear good news from Africa, but this documentary about a grassroots community project celebrates one bright beacon of hope. Until recently the village of Baga in northern Togo was anything but that. Plagued with infertile soil, the declining peasant population was barely scratching out a living. CIDAP–the Centre International pour le Development Agro-Pastoral–was created by Seda, a local man schooled in new agricultural techniques. Initially reaching out to widows and divorced women–the most deprived in Nawdba society–he showed them how to increase crop yields, an education that has empowered subsequent generations of “Bakote” women, and which has proved so successful that more than a thousand locals come every year to learn more.This lyrical, beautifully photographed film mirrors CIDAP’s philosophy by listening first and last to the women and men who have participated in the program. It takes its name from a Nawdba harvest ritual that recognizes the forest as the home of their ancestors, a place of life to be preserved and respected.

Today the Hawk takes the Chick

Released:  2008 USA
Film Length: 72 minutes
Directors: Jane Gillooly

In the Lubombo region of Swaziland, where forty percent of the population is HIV positive and life expectancy has dropped to thirty-two years, elderly women called “gogos” (grandmothers) care for groups of young children on homesteads, most of them orphans, all of them poor. Recent migrations and deadly epidemics have broken down traditional family and social structures. One entire generation is missing. The gogos provide a social welfare system that works, though barely. Some people don’t eat every day, many are sick. This profoundly sad story, unfolding slowly and steadily through the sensitive direction of Jane Gillooly, forces us to ask: what will happen in the near future when the gogo is gone?

Road to Baleya

Released:  2008 Canada/Mali
Film Length: 50 minutes
Directors: Bay Weyman

This one-hour documentary by award-winning filmmaker Bay Weyman follows a group of Canadian musicians who journey to Mali, West Africa, to record local musicians. Equipped with a portable sound recording facility to make quality recordings available to the African musicians, they embark on a remarkable journey that takes them from the dusty streets of Bamako, the capital, to the remote villages of the rugged south-west hill country. In the process, the documentary examines issues of basic education, private sector development, communication and music as a catalyst for human rights, democracy and good governance.

So if you’re looking to take a trip outside of Toronto this month check out the Peterborough ReFrame festival, I know I will.


January 5, 2009 | 2:01 AM Comments  0 comments

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Top Posts of 2008

A recap seems to be the thing to do in the blogosphere, although I’m a few days too late.  I got my inspiration here: Blood and Milk and Global Health Report.  So, here are the top five most popular posts on my blog in its first year - its a surprising mix!

Ethiopian Nativity of Mary: [...]

January 3, 2009 | 1:01 AM Comments  0 comments

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