“We have stories to show”

Youth in Cambodia use documentary film to shed light on indigenous issues

 First-time filmmakers from the predominantly indigenous Cambodia province of Rattanakiri, participated in a 10-day DocuFilm camp to develop films on issues that affect their lives.

From music to early marriage to smoking and dropping out of school, the teens threw themselves enthusiastically into their topics and film production, working overtime to push themselves to create high-quality videos.

A team of young indigenous Cambodian DocuFilm camp participants edit their storyline and discuss how to select better footage to match the narrative on indigenous dropout rates. Credit: Let’s Document Cambodia

A team of young indigenous Cambodian DocuFilm camp participants edit their storyline and discuss how to select better footage to match the narrative on indigenous dropout rates. Credit: Let’s Document Cambodia

“This training does not only provide me with filming skills, but it also helps me to enhance my confidence and communication skills,” said Phoeun Pet, a student from Tampuan. “During the field work, I found in myself the strength to talk with villagers and authority that I have [never] done before due to lack of opportunities.”

Sunflower Film Organization (SFO), an Internews partner, armed the 14 selected participants with skills to source story angles, edit, collect footage, and tell stories, as a steppingstone to documentary production.

In addition to highlighting issues rarely covered in film or reporting in the area, the camp connected indigenous Cambodians from different communities. Several participants have stayed in touch with each other and the trainers and project staff, sharing opportunities to further develop their production skills. 

“I’ve continued to produce more films because of my personal interest and curiosity,” said Mang Lean, a student from Tampuan who also works with a local organization to conserve Indigenous languages. “I want to learn more about the production skills. More importantly, I am keen on making short films, which I can tell a story and issues faced by Indigenous people in my community.”

Phoeun Pet, center in white shirt, works to set up an interview with a mother and child. A student from Tampuan, Pet said the workshop gave her confidence, alongside new filmmaking skills. Credit: Let’s Document Cambodia

Phoeun Pet, center in white shirt, works to set up an interview with a mother and child. A student from Tampuan, Pet said the workshop gave her confidence, alongside new filmmaking skills. Credit: Let’s Document Cambodia

What’s Next: Festival Screening

Due to a third wave of COVID-19 in Cambodia, physical activities, movement and gatherings were restricted this spring. The team could not conduct a follow-up trip to get remaining footage and edits, which created challenges for the partners and editors. Currently, SFO is working virtually with indigenous producers to polish the videos.

The four films focus on: child marriage, profiling a young girl who got married at the age of 13; the negative effects of smoking in indigenous communities; the experiences of indigenous school children, and an examination of the reasons for high rates of school non-completion among them, and the preservation of the Gong – a traditional music instrument for the Kreung indigenous community.

Despite delays, all four final films have secured placement to be screened at the Chaktomuk Short Film Festival this fall and will be available online after the Festival.

The documentary workshop and post-production are supported by FilmAid, a project of Internews.

HBO hosts Game of Thrones ‘MaraThrone’ to raise money for FilmAid and other charitable causes

FilmAid has been selected as one of 10 charitable causes that HBO will help raise money for during a Game of Thrones “MaraThrone” taking place this month to mark 10 years since the epic’s launch.

Game of Thrones fans will be encouraged to binge various episode collections of the series, and separately to raise money for the chosen charities, which cast members will highlight.

FilmAid uses film and other media to bring life-saving information, psychological relief, and much-needed hope to communities in need. For more than 20 years, the organisation has used the power of film to project hope and change lives.

FilmAid programs have operated in a wide range of countries, from Zimbabwe to Haiti to Colombia to Kenya. These programs are tailored to the needs of the local communities.

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The 13th annual FilmAid Film Festival will be Online November 12th - 24th

The FilmAid Film Festival will showcase young filmmakers who offer a vision for our future where all people can live dignified lives free from violence, bigotry, inequality and oppression.

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September 21, 2020. New York City. The 2020 FilmAid Film Festival will kick-off November 12 and host a 12-day celebration of the creative self-expression and ambitious determination of young filmmakers demanding to speak for themselves, tell their own stories, and represent their own communities.

During a year when much of the world has been forced into seclusion by a global pandemic, and then compelled to take action by the global demand for equality, the FilmAid Film Festival (#FAFF2020) will present Visions of the Future We Desire, a program of shorts, features, and panel discussions providing a vision for the future where all people can live dignified lives free from violence, bigotry, inequality and oppression.

In its 13th year, the FilmAid Festival will go online for the first time, providing a global platform for emerging film talent to engage global audiences in finding solutions to the problems that prevent vulnerable communities from determining their own destinies. With support from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the global film industry and individual sponsors, activists, celebrities and special guests, the festival will unite fans, filmmakers, allies, activists, and industry decision-makers in building power in order to change the narrative for communities confronting injustice and inequality.

“The FilmAid Film Festival provides emerging filmmakers from vulnerable communities with a platform to not only tell their own stories, but to dismantle the very narratives that hold them back in the first place.”   – Keefe Murren, Executive Director, FilmAid

The Festival will culminate in a virtual gala on November 18th. Celebrities from the film and entertainment industries will present awards honoring festival winners. Categories will include best dramatic short, best documentary short, best actor, and best director, and best emerging filmmaker.

WATCH: CNN Goes Behind the Scenes of the FilmAid Film Festival

About FilmAid: FilmAid harnesses the power of film to educate, inspire and empower refugees and other vulnerable communities around the world. FilmAid's unique training courses provide ambitious young people with the skills and confidence they need to tell their own stories, and advocate for their own communities. By leveraging talent from within communities themselves, FilmAid is able to bring life-saving information and life-changing stories to over 400,000 people every year.