An Event of Note: Commemorating Freedom of Expression
Friday, October 27th, 2006Many of you will know radio journalist and human rights activist Jenn Moore, Jenn has just recently produced a very successful radio segement for CBC’s Dispatches - which you can listen to as Podcast. In this Jenn outlined how women coffee growers are asserting their independence and using the growing Fair Trade network to become more financially independent of male coffee growers.
Jenn does not let the grass grow under her feet. She has asked me to pass on the following announcement. This event looks promising. Perhaps many of you will be able to make it to view Hollman Morris’s and Ezequiel Vitonas latest contribution to the world wide effort to protect freedom of speech and expression.
Commemorating Free Expression
A Look at Independent Media and the Indigenous Movement in Colombia
With a talk & documentary screening by Hollman Morris, veteran Colombian journalist & Ezequiel Vitonas, Chief of Council for the Association of Indigenous Authorities of Northern Cauca (ACIN)
Friday November 3rd
2 to 4pm
Aboriginal Resource Centre
Room 102, 620 Gordon St (Federal Bldg, corner of South Ring Road and Gordon)
For a map see: www.uoguelph.ca/arc
Hollman Morris is this year’s recipient of the International Press Freedom Award from the Canadian Journalists for Freedom of Expression. In a country where self-censorship is the norm, and where there have been 28 cases of journalists slain over the last decade, Hollman Morris is representative of the independent journalist under threat.
The Communications Network for Truth and Life of the Association of Indigenous Councils of Northern Cauca (ACIN) who nominated Morris for the Press Freedom award, describes him as a journalist who “drop by drop, image by image, word by word, allow the threads of resistance…to weave together with distant places, in the construction of another country that we all dream about and deserve.”
“Walking the Word” (Caminando la Palabra) is what the Communications Network for Truth and Life of the ACIN do, in their ongoing struggle to defend their right to justice, truth and life, and to contest the manipulations of ‘truth’ about Colombia’s conflict and internal responses to it. It is what ‘free expression’ means to the Nasa: that the indigenous people of Cauca, Colombia will continue fighting for territorial and cultural autonomy, for the protection of mother earth, in face of increased militarization and broken accords.
Organized by Pueblos en Camino www.en-camino.org
For more information please contact Jen at jenmoore0901@gmail.com
This event is sponsored by:
The Peak,
CUPE 3913,
OPIRG-Guelph,
CFRU 93.3 FM
University of Guelph’s Central Students Association.