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From notes@igc.org Tue Sep 3 19:12:36 1996
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Date: 12 Aug 1996 14:57:01
Reply-To: Conference "zamir.chat"
From: btne@bulloch.com
Subject: Re: http://mediafilter.org/SJ/Pages/I'm confused
To: Recipients of zamir-chat-l
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I'd like to be hooked up with one of your students. My dad lives in
Shamokin and I live in Georgia. I bet I have alot in common. I
can swim, bike, read and have loads of fun. I'm an honor student
who is always looking to expand my horizons. e-mail me if your
interested or connect me with a pal who wants to e-mail.
Leigh
From notes@igc.org Tue Sep 3 19:13:15 1996
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Date: 09 Aug 1996 21:16:58
Reply-To: Conference "zamir.chat"
From: egacic@maxxpro.com
Subject: Re: http://mediafilter.org/SJ/Pages/dragi moji
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NAPIED BOSNO
From notes@igc.org Tue Sep 3 19:13:10 1996
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Date: 08 Aug 1996 23:51:04
Reply-To: Conference "zamir.chat"
From: Ivo Skoric
Subject: Re: Spread this
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From: "Ivo Skoric"
"_a riveting new documentary"_Time Magazine
"Jadranka Cigelj and Nusreta Sivac believe that part of their healing process is for the world to hear their story"_Julia Ormond
CALLING THE GHOSTS:
A Story about Rape, War and Women
Winner of the Nestor Almendros Award
1996 International Human Rights Watch Film Festival
Showing: September 5 - September 14
TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
Amnesty International Promotional Tour of 15 USA cities
Oct. 12, 1996 - Nov. 24,1996
Jadranka Cigelj and Nusreta Sivac,
the two Bosnian women featured in the film will be present on tour
CALLING THE GHOSTS (60 minutes, 1996) is an intimate story of survival of two women caught in a war where rape was as much an everyday weapon as bullets and bombs.
Jadranka Cigelj and Nusreta Sivac, childhood friends and legal professionals, lived the lives of "ordinary modern women" in Bosnia-Hercegovina, until one day their neighbors became their tormentors.
CALLING THE GHOSTS chronicles the transformation of these women as their personal struggle for survival transforms into a larger fight for justice. Putting rape into the international lexicon of w
r crimes becomes their mission. Due to their brave efforts, their very torturers now stand indicted by the International War Crimes Tribunal.
In June of 1996, the United Nations' International Tribunal, for the first time in history, determined that rape will not, as in previous postwar courts, be tolerated as a by-product of war. Still
t remains to be seen if those charged with rape will be convicted.
CALLING THE GHOSTS is accessible to the public through a diversified distribution campaign that targets national and international television, educational institutions, and grassroots social service
organizations.
The national tour of CALLING THE GHOSTS will offer direction on how individuals can actively respond to the need for strict enforcement of international law for crimes committed against women.
CALLING THE GHOSTS, directed by Mandy Jacobson and Karmen Jelincic, edited by Susanne Rostock, and executive produced by Julia Ormond is now available for sales and rental.
For more information: Bowery Productions (212) 677-2286, fax (212) 529-2849
Information on
The Amnesty International National Tour of
CALLING THE GHOSTS: A Story about Rape, War and Women
From October 12, 1996 to November 24, 1996,
Amnesty International will be sponsoring a national promotional tour of the award-winning documentary CALLING THE GHOSTS: A Story about Rape, War, and Women.
Jadranka Cigelj and Nusreta Sivac, the leading women featured in CALLING THE GHOSTS, will accompany this promotional tour to share their own personal experiences as victims of torture, and their eff
rts to mobilize women to document rape as a war crime and to rebuild peace in the region.
This tour will coincide with Amnesty International's annual regional conferences. The following cities will host screenings and discussions with Ms. Cigelj and Ms. Sivac:
New York City, Boston, Stamford, New Orleans, St Louis, Irvine, Los Angeles, Denver, San Francisco, Seattle, Denver, Virginia Beach, Washington DC, Chicago, Minneapolis.
Please join us in making this tour successful!
In each of the cities, we need:
help setting up networks to ensure that the film is widely distributed. Grass root groups, educational institutions and human rights advocates are encouraged to organize screenings, benefits and eve
ts and meet with Ms. Cigelj and Ms. Sivac;
television, radio, and newspaper contacts in any of the cities;
financial support for the logistics of the tour (donated airplane tickets, accommodation, venues for benefits, and translators); and
organizations and individuals who can garner support for the work of Ms. Cigelj and Ms. Sivac.
For more information, sales and rental call:
Mandy Jacobson
Bowery Productions
108 Bowery, #5, New York, NY 10013
Tel: (212)677-2286 Fax:(212)529-2849 e mail: bowery@aol.com
http://www.peacenet.org/balkans/mandy.html
From notes@igc.org Tue Sep 3 19:15:39 1996
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Date: 12 Aug 1996 12:13:53
Reply-To: Conference "zamir.chat"
From: m@dircon.co.uk
Subject: Re: http://mediafilter.org/SJ/Pages/song/chanson.histoire d'un village
To: Recipients of zamir-chat-l
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I would like to say that the so called "liberation" of Krajina was not a
liberation but a form of ethnic cleaning on a scale never seen before in
the whole of the Yugslavian conflict. One should also remember that
Croatia as it is known had only existed on this scale after the Second
World War. The homes and land in Krajina had been mainly owned by the
Serbian people for centuries, in fact it was an area mainly 95% Serb. One
should read their history before making an assumption that this was an
occupation; it was not an occupation by Serbs but their homes. I think
that these Serbian people should be allowed to go back to their homes but
this is obviously being prevented to the point whereby even today the
little remaining Serbs in the region of Krajina are being shot, their homes
and livlihood stolen from them and the Croatian Government is not doing
anything to prevent this - in any Western Government it would be an abuse
of any ordinary persons basic human rights but to-date nothing has been
done to prevent this by the Croatian government. It is obviouse that the
condonation of this goes to prove that the Croaitan government does not the
people of this land to live in their [Croatian] country. To condone what
has happened in Krajina would be to condone what happened in Bosian with
their forms of ethnic cleansing. Surely you are not saying that you are
happy to condone ethnic cleansing, as from this side of the screen this
would seem to be the message you are sending to someone of intelligence who
has read history and knows that this was Serbian land not Croaitan land -
this was Dalmatcia not Croatia