The Hub for Human Rights Media and Action is in public beta, and you can follow the latest dispatches from the Hub team here.
The Hub is a project of WITNESS.
We’re very pleased to be a part of 3 events at this year’s PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature, held annually in New York City. I’ll be moderating the first event on Apr 30 and is for high school students (details here) and includes authors Uzodinma Iweala, Amanda Michalopoulou, Patricia McCormick, Kashmira Sheth, and Jutta Richter.
We host an event open to the public on Saturday May 3rd - World Press Freedom Day. Mary Robinson, former president of Ireland, introduces “News from the Hub” a discussion with Yousef Al-Mohaimeed, Thant Myint-U, and Uzodinma Iweala. Our very own Sameer Padania will moderate this conversation from 1-2:30pm during which the authors will use videos from the Hub to “debate the role of writing and new technologies in protecting and expanding human rights.”
WITNESS supporters get a discount to attend - tickets are only $8 each with this discount. Visit this page and follow the link to purchase and type in PENMEM when prompted.
We’re also participating in BOMB Magazine’s event Thursday May 1st - “Writing Home, Finding Refuge” - we’re asking you to contribute a question - either via text, video or audio - that will be asked at the event. Check out the page on the Hub for details about authors participating in the conversation and to contribute a question!
Brian Fitzgerald is Communications Manager for Greenpeace International - below he shares his reflections on the power of video to prod power and mobilise action. Naturally, his views do not represent the views of WITNESS (but we think they’re pretty interesting).
I remember the first time I saw video of whales being hunted. It was on the family television set — one of those old behemoths set into a piece of wooden furniture with gold-threaded cloth over the speakers, I guess in 1972 or 73. It was the kiss-off story, and Walter Cronkite commented on it with the only editorializing that hardened anchorman ever allowed himself, which was the inflection and tone he put on his signature goodbye: “And that’s the way it is…”
The tone, the eyebrows, and the pause he put around the phrase that night might as well have said “what is the matter with us as a species?” He couldn’t help it — the footage we’d just watched was an astounding piece of political activism, and his was the only reaction possible. It took something that was normally far from human view, the killing of whales, and it brought it into our living rooms. And it showed a conflict — a pair of Greenpeace activists in a tiny rubber boat, putting themselves between the harpoon and the whale — and challenged the viewer to choose a side. The implicit frame around that conflict was that one party was right, and the other was wrong, and you had to make a choice: Who are you with — the guy behind the harpoon, or those folks in the boat? I knew where I stood. So did enough people that a global movement to save the whale was born out of those images.
When I think about video as an activist tool, I think about a Quaker concept called “bearing witness.” It’s kind of a quirky concept, but here’s how it breaks down. If you witness a crime, you bear a moral responsibility. You can choose to act against the crime, you can choose not to. But if you’ve seen it and do nothing, you carry part of the burden of responsibility. Read more »
Two of my fine colleagues have been interviewed on other blogs recently about WITNESS’ model of video advocacy.
The first is an interview withProgram Director, Sam Gregory, conducted by Henry Jenkins the Director of the MIT Comparative Media Studies Program on his personal blog after meeting Sam at the recent DIY Video Summit hosted at the University of Southern California. The interview is a great background to how WITNESS got started and how we’ve evolved (i.e. from literally giving video cameras away to human rights activists to providing more strategic guidance to activists in how to incorporate video into their campaigns to the creation of the hub). For anyone who’d like to know more about us, and even for those who know us well, check out this informative interview.
The second is posted by CityLimits - an organization that focuses on fostering discussions about policy, programs and the people involved in New York City. In “Its Not a Movement Without a Movie” editor Karen Loew examines the explosion of hyper-local media creation by NYC activists and advocacy groups. Suvasini Patel, our Communications Manager is cited referencing the potential of video to galvanize and inspire grassroots communities.
Both articles speak to the power and the ease with which more and more people are employing video for specific causes. Kind of like what users can do on the Hub. Consider this an invitation to get uploading! (or sharing, or commenting/ rating, joining a campaign).
A brief dispatch from San Francisco, where yesterday I spent some quality time with Loic Le Meur, Cathy Brookes and VinVin at Seesmic. As well as a quickfire exchange with users on Seesmic - some of whom are already on the Hub - Loic and I had a quick chat on Seesmic’s rooftop:
More soon on SF and LA (where I will be at the Media Re:Public conference at USC Annenberg tomorrow)…