September 21, 2024

Idavox

The Media Outlet of One People's Project

Calendar

Jun
23
Sat
Screening: 206 Zundel, a documentary about Ernst Zundel @ Ryerson Image Arts
Jun 23 @ 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Screening: 206 Zundel, a documentary about Ernst Zundel @ Ryerson Image Arts | New York | United States

From the Doc Now website:

Using archival materials, 206 Carlton brings together a story of racism and resistance in the city of Toronto, through focusing on one address, one house. At the center of this story is Ernst Zundel, a former resident of 206 Carlton Street, and internationally infamous Holocaust denier. From this downtown Victorian townhouse he spread hate materials that found their way to the hands of hateful groups around the world.

About the Artist

Sylvia Nowak is a Toronto based activist, documentary maker and artist. Her academic background began in still photography but has shifted to include video and digital media. At the core of all her work is an interest in social issues and an investigative instinct. She is the current co-chair of the DocNow Documentary Festival.

Aug
4
Sat
Portland Presents Rock Against Fascism Show! @ Cider Riot
Aug 4 @ 5:59 pm – 6:59 pm
Portland Presents Rock Against Fascism Show! @ Cider Riot | Portland | Oregon | United States

R.A.S.H Northwest presents our third Rock Against Fascism PDX a benefit concert. Local bands will be donating their time to help us raise money to support antifascist prisoners. Hard left from Oakland will be traveling up here to donate their time also.

Artist:
Hard Left (punk)
The Faction (pdx hip hop)
All Worked Up (SHARP Oi!)
Rum Rebellion (pirate Punk)
Death Ridge Boys (left wing Oi!)

All proceeds will go to help antifascist prisoners.

Sep
6
Thu
‘Skin’ to Premiere at Toronto Film Festival @ Various Venues
Sep 6 @ 8:44 pm – Sep 16 @ 9:44 pm
'Skin' to Premiere at Toronto Film Festival @ Various Venues | Toronto | Ontario | Canada

Skin, the movie that tells the true story of Bryon Widner, a onetime enforcer for the Vinlander Social Club for whom turning his back on hatred and violence meant undergoing painful and expensive operations to remove the tattoos that life, will premiere at the 2018 Toronto International Film Festival. Based on the Bill Brummel documentary Erasing Hate, The movie stars Jamie Bell (Billy Elliot, Turn) as Bryon, Danielle MacDonald (Patti Cake$) as Julie, Vera Farmiga (The Departed, Bates Motel) as Shareen and Mike Colter (Luke Cage, The Good Wife) as One People’s Project’s Daryle Lamont Jenkins, who was instrumental in helping Bryon leave his old life behind.

The movie is the first produced in America for Israel-born director Guy Nattiv, known there for the movies Stranger and The Flood.

The 43rd Toronto International Film Festival runs from September 6 to 16, 2018. Individual tickets go on sale September 1 to TIFF Members, September 2 to Insiders, and September 3 to the public. Watch this page for the day Skin debuts.

Dec
15
Sat
Screening: ALT-RIGHT: AGE OF RAGE @ Emanuel Lutheran Church
Dec 15 @ 6:00 pm – 10:00 pm
Screening: ALT-RIGHT: AGE OF RAGE @ Emanuel Lutheran Church

The subject of this powerful documentary will be there to take questions and talk about his experiences leading up to this film. A great chance to come out and network with people fighting hate in New Jersey, see a great movie, and have a discussion after.

New Brunswick, NJ, December 07, 2018 –(PR.com)– One’s People’s Project will be showing the documentary “Alt-Right: Age of Rage” at Emanuel Lutheran Church in New Brunswick, New Jersey, on Saturday, December 15th. The event will run from 6pm to 10pm and will feature a post-film discussion with activist and One People’s Project founder Daryle Lamont-Jenkins. The event is sponsored by the Socialist Party of Central Jersey, New Jersey Revolution Radio, The Green Party of New Jersey and others.

“Alt-Right: Age of Rage” focuses on the ascendance of the alt-right movement in the aftermath of the election of Donald Trump and concludes with the events that took place in Charlottesville, Virginia in August of 2017. The film, according to IndieWire.com, addresses head-on the question, “does talking about neo-Nazis help expose the flimsy hatred that fuels their ideologies, or does giving oxygen to toxic firebrands like Richard Spencer and Milo Yiannopoulos only make them stronger?”

Daryle Lamont-Jenkins also features prominently in the film as a leader vocal and active in the movement against white nationalist and racist groups. “Hate speech is protected under the First Amendment,” says Jenkins in the film, “but if what you say does cause some sort of harm people are going to have to respond.”

The screening of the film is timely given recent hate crimes such as the massacre at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh. Additionally, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, there are at least six active white nationalist or racist skinhead organizations in New Jersey alone.

According to Film Threat, “No person of conscience can watch (the film) without wanting to stand and howl in rage.”

The event is s fund raiser for the One People’s Project, admission is free, although there is a suggested donation.

One People’s Project has been on the front lines reporting on and exposing the racist right, working hand in hand with countless coalitions to shut down ultra-nationalist conferences, and rehabilitating ex-white-supremacists for 17 years.