"Golden Dawn Girls" to open the 2018 HUMAN international documentary film festival

March 7 2018

The Fritt Ord Foundation and 2018 HUMAN international documentary film festival invites the public to the opening of this year’s festival, featuring a screening of the Norwegian documentary Golden Dawn Girls, on Wednesday, 7 March, at 6 p.m. at the Klingenberg Cinema. Tickets cost NOK 30, and can be purchased on the website of Nordisk Film Kino.

Director Håvard Bustnes will speak as a prelude the film, and the festival’s opening remarks will be delivered by Matthew Goodwin, an eminent professor of International Politics at Kent University. He will address the growth in right-wing extremist movements and parties in Europe.

In Golden Dawn Girls we follow the right-wing extremist party Golden Dawn through a turbulent period in Greek politics – from 2012, when the party’s representatives were imprisoned over accusations that they were operating a criminal organisation, to when the party became the country’s third largest in the election of 2015. The documentary follows three women who are all related to the imprisoned men – a mother, wife and daughter, respectively – who step in and run the party in the men’s absence.

Satirical anniversary party

Immediately following the film, there will be an anniversary party with time to mingle followed by a debate with a satirical slant. A panel consisting of Dag Sørås, Morten Beyer-Olsen, Mona Abdel-Fadil, Kai Eide and Anine Kierulf will be asked what human rights have actually done for us? The conversation will be moderated by the All Powerful satirist Eirik Bergesen.

The party will be organised at the Club in the new Røverstaden, just a stone’s throw from Klingenberg Cinema. Tickets for the anniversary party will also cost NOK 30, and must be purchased separately from the film screening. Tickets for the party are available for purchase here.

Read more about the event on Facebook.

News

Frie stemmer Deeyah Khan:

November 24 2024

Dokumentarfilmskaper Deeyah Khan startet sin karriere med å lage en dokumentar om en kvinne som ble utsatt for æresdrap. Filmen ble vendepunktet i hennes anvendelse av ytringsfriheten, sier hun. Khan er basert i London og jobber internasjonalt.

– Det som skiller Norge fra mange andre land, er evnen til å delta i konstruktiv offentlig dialog rundt vanskelige og ofte polariserende temaer. Samtidig kan vi bli flinkere til å inkludere et større mangfold og flere minoritetsstemmer, sier hun.

Intervjuet er på engelsk.

Refuse to be silenced. Free Media Awards handed out in Oslo

September 17 2024

We refuse to be silenced.
That was the common message when six media outlets, journalists, and editors from Georgia, Azerbaijan, Ukraine, Russia, and Belarus received the Free Media Awards 2024 on September 17 at the Nobel Institute in Oslo.
– Threatening, attacking, kidnapping, and murdering journalists has become a war tactic, said documentary filmmaker Tonje Hessen Schei in her speech to the prize winners.

Fritt Ord's grants for master’s degrees

September 9 2024

Is your master’s project about freedom of expression, social debate or journalism? If so, you can apply for a student grant from the Fritt Ord Foundation.

The History of History – graphic novels can shed light on history in new ways

September 9 2024

Graphic novels that address historical topics was this year’s focus among the 144 public libraries that responded to the Fritt Ord Foundation’s call for applications from libraries for 2024, "The History of History».
According to graphic art creators as well as librarians, graphic novels can recount history in new ways to new groups of readers. Forty-four libraries have been granted MNOK 2.6 to organise meetings on nonfictional prose, fiction and graphic novels. This is the largest amount since the calls for applications from libraries began in 2008.