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UID:Indybay-18327469
SEQUENCE:18335442
CREATED:20061107T210900Z
DESCRIPTION:DOCUMENTARY ON HATE VIOLENCE AFTER 9/11 PREMIERES IN CALIFORNIA  \n\nSAN 
 FRANCISCO, Nov. 7 – Divided We Fall: Americans in the Aftermath, an 
 independent documentary film that chronicles a student's cross-country 
 journey in the aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, premieres in Northern 
 California with two screenings.  \n\nFirst, as part of the 3rd I South 
 Asian International Film Festival, Divided We Fall premieres Sunday 11:30am 
 at the Roxie Cinema in San Francisco, followed by a discussion with the 
 filmmakers.  The premiere is part of the film's national tour this fall, 
 which continues on to Sacramento Tuesday, Nov. 14 hosted by Lieutenant 
 Governor Cruz Bustamante at the Secretary of State Auditorium.  
 \n\nDirected by Sharat Raju, Divided We Fall follows Harvard student (and 
 California native) Valarie Kaur in the days and months after the 2001 
 terrorist attacks as she drove across America with a video camera, 
 interviewing victims of hate violence. Weaving expert analysis into a 
 personal journey and cross-country road trip, the film examines 'who 
 counts' as American in times of crisis.  \n\n"Five years in the making, 
 Divided We Fall invites audiences on a journey across America to experience 
 the untold stories of 9/11," said Kaur.  "The journey spirals into the 
 larger question of who counts as 'one of us' in a world divided into 'us 
 and them.'"  \n\nOn Sept. 15, 2001, Balbir Singh Sodhi, a turbaned Sikh 
 man, was shot and killed in Mesa, Arizona, the first of an estimated 
 nineteen "retribution" murdered in hate violence after the attacks. Many 
 Sikhs who wore turbans were immediately targeted in the backlash.  Half a 
 million Americans and 23 million people worldwide belong to the Sikh 
 religion, which requires the turban as an article of faith.  \n\nThis 
 murder compelled Kaur, a third-generation Sikh American, then a junior at 
 Stanford University, to take action. With her turbaned 18-year-old cousin 
 as cameraman, she took to the road, documenting stories seldom seen or 
 heard by mainstream America.  \n\nKaur traveled through fourteen American 
 cities, from Ground Zero in New York City to Sodhi's gas station in 
 Arizona, and captured more than one hundred hours of interview footage.  
 People invited her into their lives to share stories of fear and 
 unspeakable loss, but also of resilience and hope. Her journey ended in 
 Punjab, India, where she interviewed Sodhi's widow, Herjinder Kaur.  \n\nA 
 second round of production in 2005, supported by a New Filmmaker Grant from 
 Panavision Camera and a generous contribution from Eastman Kodak, added 
 interviews with noted scholars, professors, lawmakers, and policy experts 
 who provide context and analysis to the original stories Kaur gathered in 
 2001. Divided We Fall made its world premiere on September 14, 2006, the 
 eve of the five-year memorial of Sodhi's death.  \n\nKaur currently studies 
 ethics as a master's candidate at Harvard Divinity  School, where she is 
 the founding director of the Discrimination and National Security 
 Initiative, an affiliate of the Harvard Pluralism Project.  \n\n"Terrorism 
 and critical moments in the war on terror trigger hate violence at home," 
 Kaur said. "If we can embrace all differences into the American mosaic and 
 recognize Sikh and Muslim faces as 'American', then we can curb the fear 
 and violence that divides our nation in times of crisis and stand truly 
 united."  \n\nRaju, an award-winning filmmaker and recent graduate of the 
 American Film Institute Conservatory, teamed up with Kaur to present the 
 first full-length documentary film addressing hate crimes in the aftermath 
 of Sept. 11.  \n\n"In the months after Sept. 11, the phrase 'United We 
 Stand' was on bumper stickers and signs all across the country," Raju said. 
 "But the phrase has a second part – 'Divided We Fall.'  There's a bigger 
 picture, and we must strive to bridge the divisions between us in order for 
 those words to be more than just a slogan. We hope our film is one more 
 step in that direction."  \n\nFor more information, see the official film 
 site: www.dwf-film.com.\n\nPress kit available here: 
 http://www.dwf-film.com/DWF%20Press%20Kit.pdf\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/11/07/18327469.php
SUMMARY:SF: Documentary Film on post-9/11 hate crimes screens in SF
LOCATION:Roxie Cinema\n3117 16th Street (between Valencia and Guerrero) San 
 Francisco, CA\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/11/07/18327469.php
DTSTART:20061112T193000Z
DTEND:20061112T213000Z
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