top
International
International
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Regions
Indybay Regions North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area California United States International Americas Haiti Iraq Palestine Afghanistan
Topics
Newswire
Features
From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature

Breakthrough at 1st Latin American Working Class Film & Video Festival

by LaborFest (laborfest [at] laborfest.net)
The first Latin American Working Class Film and Video Festival was held in Buenos Aires this past month. Plans are being made to tour it throughout the US and internationally.
Breakthrough at 1st Latin American Working Class Film & Video Festival

Steve Zeltzer, LaborFest, Labor Video Project

BUENOS AIRES, Nov. 26, 2004-It began with an avante garde and experimental
music composition to film segments of Einsentein's Strike to the massive
protest and rebellion in Argentina against the Menem government in 2001 that was produced by the labor film group and festival initiator Ojo Obrero.
Titled "XO0N-Artistas Independientes Contemporaries", the 9 contributing artists brought
the silent films to life with their music. This exciting original
composition was performed by some of the leading musicians from Argentina
and was held at the National de Artes de las Secretqeria de Cultura de la
Nación. It was part of a production by Frente de Artistas en Lucha. (Front
of Artists In Struggle) http://www.lucharte.com.ar/.

This was the opening evening of the first Festival of Latin America working
class Film and Video. It was sponsored not only by a organizing committee
of independent labor film and video producers http://www.felco.ojoobrero.org and
Luch Arte but also received the support of the Argentinean Film Council and
the use of their theaters for free. It was also supported by Palaise de
Glace. The film festival organizers with a campaign were also able to get
the council to produce 500 large festival posters that were placed on
boulevard signs throughout the city.

Buenos Aires used to be the 3rd richest city in the world and Argentina the
richest country in Latin America. The city was built on this past wealth
but the collapse of the peso threw millions of workers and their families
out of their jobs and many ended have ended up on the streets of the
cities. This economic devastation has spread throughout Latin America. From
Bolivia and Ecuador to Brazil and Mexico the people of the continent have
seen their living standards torn to shreds.

These devastating and dire economic conditions have been planned and
implemented in the US by the multinationals and the IMF with the
collaboration of Menem and a host of US controlled puppet governments in
the Americas.

These rebellions and explosions have been censored from the media in the US
and around the world but were brought forward on the screen at the
festival. The media in Argentina has also censored out the historic
protests in neighboring country Bolivia against the effort to privatize gas and export it to
Peru.

One of the films from this struggle in Bolivia, "Fusil Metralla el pueblo
no se calla" by Tercer Mundo had used tv footage, mainstream newspaper articles and powerful
editing to show the massive explosion against the privatization of the gas
industry and the successful movement to stop the export of this valuable
resource to Peru.

The protests of indigenous Indians, women and unions from the miners to the
teachers and students were tied together with fast clip editing and
powerful scenes.

Tercer Mundo (tercermundo03 [at] hotmail.com) had also
traveled for 4 days by bus from La Paz to Buenos Aires to participate and
screen their video at the festival. They were elated to meet with other labor film and video
producers from around the world.
One of the final scenes of their video is the hated US supported president
of the country taking off on his jet to escape to Chile after using the
army to massacre hundreds of trade unionists, peasants and indigenous
people.

The festival screened dozens of films from Argentina,
Brazil, Mexico, Chile, Uruguay. The films were selected by a showing them first at workers assemblys and
community meetings throughout the country. Viewers then chose their favorite films and these were the
films screened at the festival.
Two films were shown from the United
States and Korea. Workers were stunned to see the violent attack on workers
and students protesting the Iraq war in the film "Shots on The Docks"
(lvpsf [at] labornet.org) and the film "Friend or Foe" by Labor News Production
(mjkim [at] mediact.org) directed by Jiyoung Lee in Seoul Korea.

The experience of Korean telecommunication workers fighting contract labor
and their long struggles and betrayal left a sharp impression on
Argentinean workers since they are also fighting the destruction of permanent jobs.

One part of the festival was a retrospective of Raymundo Gleyzer who was a
militant film maker during the 60´s and 70´s who was murdered by the military
dictatorship which came to power with the support of Kissinger and the US in 1976. Four of
Gleyzer's films were shown including "Los Traidores" about the
transformation of a trade union militant into a supporter of the bosses and
the government. Attending the retrospective was musician and a leading
actor of the film Victor Proncet. Proncet was also the co-scriptwriter of this film.

Proncet was joined by his son Carlos Pronzato who is now producing labor
videos from throughout the Americas. One of his films on the Bolivian
rebellion was screened at the fundacion Centro De Estudos Brasilleiros as
well as "Revolta Do Buzu" of a city-wide protest of students against bus
fare increases.
The festival organizers also organized discussion panels during the
festival on Militant Cinemas and the Popular Rebellions, The Experience and
Practice of labor video producers, The Attack on Women by the Church and
Global Economic Policies and The Movement of the Piquetero and the
Elections.
The Piquetero movement was a mass organized response to the economic
collapse and the criminalization of the poor and unemployed by the government
and capitalist media.

Committees were set up throughout the country that blocked roads and
organized to provide food for the starving people. They also supporters
hundreds of factory occupations. Many of these factory occupations have now
been filmed by labor videographers and their documentaries were screened by
the festival. Ojo Obrero was set up only in 2001 and many of the other labor video
groups came out of the Argentinian upheaval and the need to show this struggle on video
not only in Argentina but throughout the world.

Some of the international conference participants stayed at a worker
occupied hotel in downtown Buenos Aires. The hotel B.A.U.E.N. Coop. on Av.
Callao 360 (b.a.u.e.n [at] latinmail.com). This hotel was seized by the workers and
reopened as a cooperative. It has conventions and rents rooms around $20.00 for a single and
$33.00 for a suite which includes breakfast.

The workers said it was a struggle to learn how to run the 210 room hotel but they
have overcome and are now in a political battle to legalize worker
occupations permanently not only for their hotel but for worker cooperatives throughout the country.

Seventy percent of the Piqueteros movement are women and many of these
women are now organized politically in various Piqueteros groups that
provide food and other support for the working class and poor women.

One of these movements Pollo Obrero has forced the government to even
provide food to their offices for distribution in the barrios and
communities.

One of the films of this movement "Open The Road To The Women Fighters"
(Paso a Las Luchadoras) by Ojo Obrero (http://www.ojoobrero.org) had previously
been screened at Laborfest 2004 (http://www.laborfest.net) in San Francisco.

Many of the labor film makers are also involved in labor media in general.
Cine Piquetero (cinepiquetero [at] datafull.com) has established pirate
broadcast television in some of the barrios.

The same time the festival was taking place, an encampment of ceramic
workers from SOECN were conducting a protest against the government next to
the National Congress building. They had arranged a photo exhibition of
their struggle and also were screening videos in the evening.

Another of the groups who had videos at the festival and at the screening of
the workers' encampment was Grupo Alavio (alaviocine [at] yahoo.com). They have
also produced journals about their work in English. One of their films
"Fallujah Bajo Sitio" compared the conditions that the Iraqis now face to
the economic conditions facing the poor and oppressed in Argentina.

The festival organizers also proposed the establishment of an international
labor media network that would produce on the web a journal of articles by
labor media groups from around the world and also a data bank of all labor
films and videos. It would also establish a calendar of all
labor film and cultural festivals throughout the world
and links to their festivals.
They also proposed that there be an open discussion and
debate of labor film and videographers as well as radio producers about the
issues and experiences of their productions. It also supported the
initiative of the Bolivian group Tecer Mundo to have the festival in La
Paz, Boliva in October 2005 and to support the distribution of the festival
throughout the US and internationally. Laborfest organizers have offered to
help circulate the festival throughout the US next year. Labor Video activists, solidarity
centers or Labor or Latin American studies programs can contact Laborfest for more information
if they would like to screen the festival in their community.
This festival marks a new beginning of working class film and video in
Latin America and will provide a major impetus for its growth and expansion
throughout the hemisphere. There are also discussions to have another Latin
American Working Class Film and Video Festival in Buenos Aires and the
first launching of a LaborTech Latin America conference alongside the festival next year in Buenos Aires. It would be
supported by Labortech2004 http://www.labortech2004.org which was held this year in San Francisco.
The importance of developing labor communication media and technology in Latin America to educate workers about their common struggles and to build solidarity is a critical task for the international labor media
movement.






















Add Your Comments
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!

Donate

$230.00 donated
in the past month

Get Involved

If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.

Publish

Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.

IMC Network