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The Independent | April
2005
Journeys
in Film:
A Children's Program
Foreign films foster
awareness and
tolerance
By Derek Loosvelt
Inside Manhattan's City
Hall Academy on a dark and wet Friday morning this past February, actor Liam
Neeson introduced some 35 New York City public school teachers to
Journeys
in Film,
a nonprofit educational program using feature-length foreign films such as Whale
Rider, Bend it Like Beckham, and The Cup as a springboard
to instill cultural awareness and tolerance among middle school students.
Neeson, national spokesman for Journeys, stressed the importance of creating
global citizens and said he was honored to be in a room full of teachers,
explaining that he comes from a family of teachers himself and highly respects
the profession. Neeson ended his brief introduction by telling the teachers
their work is vital to the long-term well being of the United States. "For the
next generation," he said, "knowledge of the world is no longer a luxury, it's
a necessity."
Neeson's appearance was
followed by a Journeys
in Film
workshop-a professional development seminar for teachers sponsored by the New
York City Board of Education-that included sample lesson plans and a screening
of Children of Heaven, another film used in Journeys curriculum.
James
McDaniel and The Lady Warriors in Edge of America,
slated for next year (Fred Hayes/Showtime)
Journeys, which was
officially unveiled to more than 4,500 students in seven cities in 2004 and
could reach as many as 50,000 students in the 2005-2006 school year, is the
creation of Joanne Ashe, whose background certainly informs the program. The
daughter of Polish immigrants, Ashe grew up in the late 1950s and 1960s in
Beverly, Massachusetts, among families of numerous ethnicities. She holds a
master's degree in humanistic education and has curated art exhibits on racism
as well as children's mental health issues. She's also the mother of two
daughters and an adopted son, who is originally from Siberia. That experience
prompted Ashe to work for an international adoption agency and, later, to
coproduce The Waiting Children, a short documentary taking viewers
inside Russian orphanages that appeared at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival.
Ashe, who serves as
Journeys executive director, says the idea to teach children through film came
to her during the 2001 Palm Springs International Film Festival, held a few
months after 9/11. At the festival, Ashe saw nine films, two of which, she
says, "stood out and got me thinking." One, Abandoned (2001), written
and directed by Hungarian-born Arpad Sopsits, follows a young boy thrown into
an orphanage even though his parents are still alive. The second,
Baran (2001),
written and directed by Iranian filmmaker Majid Majidi, focuses on an unlikely
relationship in Tehran between a 17-year-old Kurdish worker and a young Afghan
with a secret. "After that film," Ashe says, "while the credits were still
rolling, I came up with the idea."
Originally, Ashe
thought the project, which today involves in-class screenings as well as pre-
and post-screening discussions and related lessons and assignments, would be
geared towards high school students and focus on human rights issues. "In order
to reach the masses," she says, "I knew early on I had to take the
project to schools, rather than theaters." She also figured kids wouldn't care
as much about a human rights issue unless they were familiar with the culture
in which it was based. So she thought to take the program to middle schools and
center it on connecting to characters and story, which she hoped would lead to
cultural understanding. Ashe then decided to combine the program with
geography, history, and social studies lessons. "It was a way to get into
schools," she says. "It couldn't be arts-based, because arts funding was being
cut."
While the idea began to
grow, Ashe met Neeson in a bar in New York. Two of her daughter's friends were
appearing with him in a Broadway production of The Crucible, and at an
after-party, Ashe was introduced to the actor and thanked him for his moving
portrayal of Oskar Schindler in Schindler's List. Ashe's parents are
Holocaust survivors, and her father worked in Schindler's factory. "That film
validated my parents' lives," Ashe says."Until then, survivors had largely been
forgotten." After Ashe told Neeson all this, he said, "God bless you. And God
bless your father. Tell me about him."
She did, and then told
Neeson about her idea for Journeys. "I just let it out," she says, "and right
away he said, 'How can help you?'" On the spot, Ashe asked Neeson if he'd be
her national spokesperson, and he agreed. "It was still an idea then," she
says, "but that got me focused."
The first Journeys
screening occurred in 2003 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, at a theater not far
from where Ashe lives and bases Journeys. (For logistical reasons, screenings
are now held in classrooms.) About 250 kids from five schools watched The Cup
(1999), a film about two young Tibetan refugees who, along with several teenage
monks, are transformed during the broadcast of soccer's World Cup.
Ashe hoped the kids
watching would be transformed, too. The outcome didn't disappoint. "At the end
of the film the kids were clapping," Ashe says. "And during the Q&A, they
were jumping out of their seats to ask questions." Before the film rolled, kids
were asked to look out for stereotyping, various cultural objects, and the
different ways in which food is prepared and people greet each other-all of
which is standard procedure in Journeys' lesson plans. Kids were also asked
what they'd think if they were to meet a Tibetan boy who wore an orange robe
with a sash.
"Most thought it would
be 'weird,'" says Ashe. "But after the film, when we asked them the same
question, they said it would be 'cool.' It went from weird to cool. And that
was our data." Additional data came a few weeks later when Ashe heard that many
kids had asked their teachers if a Tibetan exchange student could come to their
school.
In 2003 and 2004, while
searching for other middle school-appropriate films with which to rollout the
project on a wider scale, Ashe focused on creating alliances and landing
funding. As a result, she discovered Building Bridges: A Peace Corps Classroom
Guide to Cross- Cultural Understanding, an online resource that teaches
students about the universal aspects of culture and the ways in which it
influences behavior. Ashe thought Building Bridges would complement Journeys
and today, the curriculum includes it. The Peace Corps' Donna Molinari, who
works alongside Ashe, praises the program. "I know of no other organization
that approaches cross-cultural understanding in such a meaningful and effective
way," she says of Journeys. "Films are meticulously screened for content as
well as screenwriting quality, and students are drawn in by seeing their own
likeness on screen-but in a far away place."
Whale
Rider is one of the films that Journeys uses to instill
cultural awareness in kids (South Pacific Pictures)
Ashe also formed an
advisory board, which includes actor, director, and writer Harold Ramis; Alan
Dershowitz, a prominent law professor at Harvard University; and Henry Louis
Gates, Jr., a professor and chair of The African and African American Studies
Department, also at Harvard. Ashe says, "I wanted to get the blessing of the
film industry and the heavy hitters in the academic world and connect them
together." Ramis, a Chicago resident and friend of Ashe's prior to joining the
Journeys board, connected her with the CEO of Chicago Public Schools Arne
Duncan, who was instrumental in bringing Journeys to his city.
As for funding, actress
Shirley MacLaine, the former chairperson of the New Mexico Film Office's Film
Advisory Board, heard about Journeys, loved the idea, and took it to an
anonymous Hollywood philanthropist who wrote Ashe a generous check. Soon after,
Ashe hired cross-cultural communications specialist Anna Mara Rutins and
filmmaker Ethan Silverman to help out. Silverman, who wrote and directed The
Waiting Children (the film Ashe co-produced), writes Journeys's lesson
plans specific to teaching film as literature. "For example," Ashe says, "with Children
in Heaven, we show students how to look at the structure of the film
through a pair of shoes. We also teach them what to look for in a film, such as
the use of different camera angles, and about perspective in film." Ashe
explains that the lesson plan for The Cup includes asking kids what monks
playing soccer with a coke can says about the West's influence on the Tibetan
culture. "So kids are also learning about their own culture too," she says.
In September 2004,
Journeys's pilot program began in Chicago, Tulsa, Seattle, Los Angeles,
Albuquerque, Toronto, and New York. Support has come from production companies
such as DreamWorks and Miramax, which donated DVDs of its films to be used in
classrooms, as well as from corporate sponsors, including Continental Airlines,
Liberty Group Publishing, and Ameritest. So far, Ashe says Journeys hasn't run
into any major obstacles, and teachers couldn't be more pleased.
Seung-Ho
Yoo (foreground) and Eul-Boon Kim star in Jeong-Hyang Lee's film The Way Home,
which will be part of the 2005 Journeys in Film curriculum (Mi-Jin
Han/Paramount Classics)
"The opportunity to
invite students to look at a problem from the viewpoint of another culture is
remarkable," says Georgia Piechpander, a teacher in Chicago. Students at her
school were "spellbound with The Cup," she says. "They laughed in all the right
spots and really related to the little 'wheeler-anddealer' character." She adds
that the subtitles kept students engaged throughout, rather than turn them off,
and many kids expressed an interest in the Dalai Lama, so some classes did
extra research. Meg Venckus, another Chicago teacher, recently showed her
students Children of Heaven (which, like Baran, one of Ashe's inspirations for
Journeys, was written and directed by Majid Majidi). "A few kids actually cried
when Ali told Zohre he'd lost her shoes," says Venckus, who adds that as a
result of the film, her students "gained a better feel for the land, customs,
and people of Iran than any chapter unit could ever provide."
L-R)
Journeys founder Joanne Ashe, director of City Hall Academy
Anna Commitante, spokesman/actor Liam Neeson,
and Donna Molinari of US Peace Corps World Wise Schools (Dunkelman Mollin)
Bradley Goodman, who
teaches fifth and sixth graders at New York's East Village Community School,
has held viewings of both The Cup and Children of Heaven. "The
kids enjoyed The Cup," he says, "but they loved, and were very moved by Children
of Heaven. They were amazed at how important an old and very un-cool
pair of shoes were to the kids in the film."
Goodman explains that
his students often obsess over their expensive sneakers and says they were also
surprised that the Iranian family in the film had such a beautiful house with a
courtyard and fountain, even though they were clearly poor. "It's just
fascinating to see them making connections and realizing the differences in
priorities in other cultures," Goodman says. "Although my students live in New
York, their own worlds are actually rather small. Watching and discussing films
from other countries and cultures has been enlightening for them, priming them
to think on a global level."
Goodman partially
attributes the Journeys curriculum for inspiring his students to initiate an
in-class project that involves raising money for a school in Sudan.
Neeson
speaking at the workshop at the CityHall Academy (Dunkelman Mollin)
Along with affecting
participating students, Journeys has provided an additional outlet for
filmmakers. Ashe says several filmmakers have asked her to look at their films,
and one, Iranian filmmaker Bahman Ghobadi, expressed hopes that Ashe would
bring Journeys to Iraqi school children. Ashe, in turn, would like to use one
of Ghobadi's films, Turtles Can Fly (2004), as part of Journeys'
curriculum. "Eventually, we would like to have a series on films with strong
messages that bring issues to the forefront," she says, echoing her original
idea for the program. "Journeys was developed to teach kids about other
cultures, rather than issues, but that will come." ✮
More information is
available at www.journeysinfilm.org
Article republished
with permission of The Independent A Magazine for Video & Filmakers
Variety Weekly highlights Journeys in Film as one of 10 small non
profits with Blockbuster results!
Reprinted from Variety
Weekly July 24, 2005
Spotlight: Small
scale, big results
By
CAROLE HORST
Journeys
in Film
Joanne Ashe, Sara Jo Fischer, Anna Rutins
Action: Org uses
foreign films, paired with a detailed teaching guide developed with the Peace
Corps, to bring others cultures to middle school students in the U.S. "We heard
that students won't want to read subtitles and that they wouldn't want to watch
foreign films. But in reality, the kids like reading the subtitles and they
love the foreign films, because they learn so much more about the world from
films than from books" says Joanne Ashe. "Young people are so
mediacentric that they will respond to the films., but they have not been given
skills to analyze media content," says Sara Jo Fischer. That's where the
teaching guides come in.
Journeys
in Film
has enlisted such showbiz types as
Harold Ramis to help at teachers workshops, while Liam Neeson
has been involved since the beginning.
Films in the curriculum
include "Bend It Like Beckham,"
"The Cup" and "Whale Rider."
Contact: JourneysInFilm.org
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