Events

Nansen Refugee Award winner brings knowledge and hope to displaced Somalis

This blog has been reposted from UNHCR The UN Refugee Agency

GALKAYO, Somalia, September 18 (UNHCR)  When Hawa Aden Mohamed was a young girl, her father made a decision that would change her life  and through her, transform the lives of thousands of Somali girls. He sent her to school.

Hawa Aden Mohamed went on to earn two university degrees before launching an ambitious programme to educate and empower Somali women and girls, many of them displaced by conflict or famine. Today, UNHCR announced that she has won the 2012 Nansen Refugee Award, which honours extraordinary service to those who flee war or persecution.

"Without education, you are unaware of so many things," Hawa Aden Mohamed said in a recent interview in the town of Galkayo, some 600 kilometres north of the Somali capital, Mogadishu. "Without education, you do not exist much  physically yes, but mentally and emotionally, you do not exist."

Once a refugee herself, Hawa Aden Mohamed returned to her homeland in 1995 and discovered her calling. As co-founder of the Galkayo Education Centre for Peace and Development (GECPD), she has helped restore hope and opportunity to local residents as well as those seeking refuge from the nation's long-running conflict and recurring droughts.

The centre offers free schooling to girls as well as literacy and awareness classes for women, tailoring courses, vocational training for boys, and food and other relief items to the displaced. Since it opened in 1999, the number of girls receiving education in the Mudug district has risen from 7 per cent to 40 per cent, the highest in the country, according to the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF).

GECPD encourages women and girls to see themselves as full members of society who possess fundamental human rights. And it openly addresses the complex issues of female genital mutilation, puberty, early marriage, rape and HIV/AIDS.

Local residents were initially wary of Hawa Aden Mohamed's aims. "The mosques spoke of us, said we were devils … but we just kept quiet," she said. "It calmed down, when they saw how many, almost 250 women, were taking classes in adult education. We had built around 12 schools."

Won over by the centre's success, the people of Galkayo now call her Eedo (aunt) or Mama Hawa. "We always say there is hope, we should not lose our hope, our torch of life," she said. "We say this, but in reality it's very difficult, especially for women and children."

Born in the town of Baidoa in 1949, Mama Hawa lost a sister, Fatouma, who was circumcised around age seven and died soon afterwards from an infection. Their aunt, who organized the circumcision, did not know any better, she said. "The word 'why' was not there."

Mama Hawa continued her schooling in Mogadishu and then spent eight years in India, earning degrees in nutrition and child development. She returned home to work for Somalia's Ministry of Education, where she headed the department of women's education, and later opened a clothing business with one of her sisters.

When the military dictator Siad Barre was overthrown in 1991, she fled to Kismayo, Somalia's southern port city, and then to Kenya. She moved to Canada through a family reunification programme, but her heart was in Somalia.

Returning to her homeland in 1995, she set up a women's education centre in Kismayo. She fled a few years later when rival militia turned the town into a battleground. "I even came without my glasses," she recalled. "I left them behind, everything left behind."

She came back from exile a second time in 1999 and settled in Galkayo, as her husband was working at a nearby research institute.

In recent years GECPD has begun working with boys, too. It offers carpentry and welding classes as well as a recreational space to help keep young boys off the streets and prevent them from falling into the clutches of pirates or armed groups.

Amid a slight improvement in the political situation, Mama Hawa and her team are teaching girls about the new constitution, so that they will know their rights.

"Education never finishes," she said. "Every day you will see something new. Myself, I am not well educated. I cannot say everything. Education is always a continuous learning process. Education is everything."

By Clar Ni Chonghaile in Galkayo, Somalia

FilmAid Welcomes Mortal Instruments Cast at Exclusive Hong Kong Screening in Aid of Asia Programs

On Saturday 31st August, FilmAid Asia collaborated with HUGO BOSS to host an exclusive screening of the Mortal Instruments: City of Bones, with actors Jamie Campbell Bower and Godfrey Gao (seen above with Gerrit Ruetzel, CEO and president of HUGO BOSS Hong Kong) in attendance.

Over 600 tickets were sold in aid of the charity with over 200 of the tickets being donated to Project Share, providing underprivileged children the chance to not only see the movie, but meet their favorite stars in person.  

Well attended by media, fans, and celebrities alike, the event was a great success and saw funds raised for FilmAid Asia's regional projects which include compelling campaigns to raise landmine awareness and combat human trafficking. 

FilmAid Asia would like to thank all our generous sponsors and supporters for helping to make the day such a success and we look forward to welcoming Jamie and Godfrey, both members of the Global Artists Council, back for the next instalment of the Mortal Instruments!

Jamie Campbell Bower and some young guests

FilmFestival Awards

Dadaab Refugee Camp

Award for best feature film - Mohamedi Abdi Rage "Ibramina"

Award for best director- Mohamed Bashir Sheikh "Lacag"

Award for best actor/actress - Ahmed Shaffie "Ibramina"

Award for best camera work - Fu`ad Abdi Affey "Lacag"

Award for best script writer - Hussein Maalim "Lacag"

Award for most discipline student - Hasdi Adow

Award for most improved student - Farah Diss


Kakuma Refugee Camp

Award for best drama - Fredrick Akolom "love worthy suicide"

Award for best director - John Thomas "Larme"

Award for best cinematography  - Ebenyo William "The Edge"

Award for best actor/actress - Mugisha Akubaru (Moke) and Nyamuch Chuol (Asekon) "Larme'-Moke" and "Bitter tears-Asekon" respectively

Award for best supporting actor/actress - Peter Taban (Eddy), Alida Justine "Love online-Eddy"  and "Larme'-Esta" respectively

Award for best script/story - Majok Mabil "Ayang'"

Award for best documentary - Duc Mallard "Kakuma Can Dance"


International Entries

Beasts of the Southern Wild (2012)

Director: Benh Zeitlin
Duration: 93 minutes
Drama | USA

Synopsis: Teeming with magic, beauty and pure joy, this crowd-pleasing winner at the Sundance Film Festival has emerged as one of the year’s most acclaimed films. Newcomer Quvenzhané Wallis delivers an “Oscar-worthy performance” (Philadelphia Daily News) as Hushpuppy, the tenacious six-year-old force of nature in an isolated bayou community. When her tough but loving father Wink (Dwight Henry) succumbs to a mysterious malady, the fierce and determined girl bravely sets out on a journey to save him. But Hushpuppy’s quest is hindered by a “busted” universe that melts the ice caps and unleashes an army of prehistoric beasts.

Rain is Beautiful (2012)
Director: Marc Silver & Nick Francis
Duration: 8 minutes
Documentary | Sweden

Synopsis: Omar, a Somali refugee, fled the war in Libya last year to live in a camp on the country’s border with Tunisia. This episode of his story, Rain is Beautiful, begins with emotional farewells at the camp as Omar leaves his friends behind to begin a new life in Sandviken in northern Sweden. He is met at Stockholm Airport by the Swedish Migration Board, visits a doctor, gets his “Right to Remain” signed and discovers margarine.

Finding Hillywood (2013)

Director: Leah Warshawski & Chris Towey
Duration: 58 minutes
Documentary | USA/Rwanda

Synopsis: Finding Hillywood is a unique and endearing film about the very beginning of Rwanda’s film industry, and the pioneers who bring trust, truth, and pride to their country through cinema. This film explores the power of film to heal a man and a nation.

Nickel City Smiler (2012)
Director: Scott Murchie & Brett Williams
Duration: 99 minutes
Documentary | USA

SynopsisNickel City Smiler chronicles a refugee’s fight for survival and hope in the American rustbelt. In Burma, Smiler Greely fought against the brutal military government, who attacked, tortured, raped and murdered thousands of the country’s ethnic minorities. After spending more than twenty years in the confinement of a refugee camp, Smiler and his family were selected for resettlement in the United States and assigned to live in Buffalo, New York.Nickel City Smiler documents the struggles Smiler’s family and the refugee community encounter on the streets of one of America’s poorest cities. Forced to fight against poverty, violence and bureaucracy, Smiler battles for the hope and hearts of his people.

 

A Testimony (2013)
Director: Marta Lefler
Duration: 10 minutes
Documentary | UK

Synopsis: The film is a testimony of a twenty-six year old female refugee from Afghanistan currently living in the UK. The interviewee talks about the important life events from childhood, child marriage, running away from her violent husband, to the horrific journey to the UK and her life worries now.

 

The Last Day (2013)
Director: Siddhartha Gigoo
Duration: 12 minutes
Drama | India

Synopsis: Set in 1994 in a camp for Kashmiri Pandit exiles, the film portrays four frayed lives in a scrawny 8 x 10 tent. Gossamer memories of a glorious past taunt their tawdry and uncertain present. An old patriarch is battling dementia on his deathbed. His wife has lost the will to live. His son and daughter-in-law struggle for personal space. Will they ever find deliverance? Will they rediscover love? Will tomorrow be any different from today or yesterday? The river has all the answers, yet flows, eternally silent.