12/11 6:30pm - FREE Film Screenings!
Labor and Women Film Series
Tuesday Dec 11th 6.30-8.00 pm in WSAC Coffman 202
***Made in India***
&
***Made in Thailand***
(read after jump for film synopsis)
Facilitated discussion will follow with Marion Traub-Werner, graduate student in Geography with a focus on global work issues.
This event is free. Bring your friends!!! Free Food!!!
***Made in India***
A film by Patricia Plattner
This powerful documentary is a portrait of SEWA, the now-famous women's organization in India that holds to the simple yet radical belief that poor women need organizing, not welfare. SEWA, or the Self-Employed Women's Association, corresponds to the Indian word sewa, meaning service. Based in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad, a dusty old textile town on the edge of the Gujarati desert, SEWA is at its core a trade union for the self-employed. It offers union membership to the illiterate women who sell vegetables for 50 cents a day in the city markets, or who pick up paper scraps for recycling from the streets--jobs that most Indian men don't consider real work. Inspired by the political, economic and moral model advocated by Mahatma Gandhi, SEWA has grown since its founding to a membership of more than 217,000 and its bank now has 61,000 members, assets of $4 million and customers who walk in each day to deposit a dollar or take out 60 cents. Following the lives of six women involved in the organization, including Ela R. Bhat, its visionary founder, Plattner's documentary is an important look at the power of grassroots global feminism.
***Made In Thailand***
A film by Eve-Laure Moros and Linzy Emery
In Thailand, women make up 90 percent of the labor force responsible for garments and toys for export by multinational corporations. This powerful, revealing documentary about women factory workers and their struggle to organize unions exposes the human cost behind the production of everyday items that reach our shores. Probing the profound impact of the New World Order on the populations that provide the global economy with cheap labor, MADE IN THAILAND also profiles women newly empowered by their campaign for human and worker's rights. Several of these women are survivors of the 1993 Kader Toy Factory fire, one of the worst industrial fires in history. Today they are highly effective leaders in the grass-roots movement mobilizing workers in their recently industrialized country.
Facilitated discussion will follow with Marion Traub-Werner, graduate student in Geography with a focus on global work issues. This event is free. Bring your friends!!! Free Food!!!