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An exciting and outside-the-box project was presented, for the first time, in the 21st Thessaloniki Documentary Festival, on Tuesday, March 5th, at Warehouse C, within the framework of the Market Talks event held by the Festival’s Agora Doc Market. Greek filmmaker-scriptwriter Syllas Tzoumerkas (A BlastThe Miracle of the Sargasso Sea) and Greek actor-director Christos Passalis (Dogtoothblitz theatre group) presented the project titled “City and the City, commissioned by the Thessaloniki Film Festival and the Metropolitan Organization of Museums of Visual Arts of Thessaloniki (MOMus).

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Austrian film director Gustav Deutsch introduced the audience to the secrets of his sui generis cinema in an open discussion which took place on Monday, March 4th 2019 at the MOMus-Experimental Center for the Arts, as part of the 21st Thessaloniki Documentary Festival, and in the presence of the Thessaloniki International Film Festival Artistic Director, Mr Orestis Andreadakis. This year’s TDF edition pays tribute to Gustav Deutsch’s work by screening seven of his signature films.

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The 21st Thessaloniki Documentary Festival, in an emotionally charged ambiance, honored the memory of the recently deceased Greek filmmaker Giorgos Karipidis (1946-2019) with a special screening of his rare short film The Painter Theofilos, held on Monday March 4th, at Pavlos Zannas theater. The film had been bestowed with the first prize, as well as the critics’ award, in the 1979 Thessaloniki Film Festival. The widow of the deceased Rania Mprilaki-Karypidi also attended the event.

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The perplexing structures of bureaucracy do not differ much from one place to another around the world: long queues, longer delays, a lot of wasted time and uncertainty are some of its most common manifestations. The 21st Thessaloniki Documentary Festival sheds light to the global phenomenon of bureaucracy through a free-admission tribute titled “The Paper Chase” with 5 feature documentaries of recent production that will have their Greek premiere in Thessaloniki.

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21st THESSALONIKI DOCUMENTARY FESTIVAL [1-10/3/2019]

 

Passages: a participatory workshop about refugees

 

A novel participatory workshop entitled “Passages” took place on Sunday, March 3rd 2019 at the Center for Lifelong Learning of the Municipality of Thessaloniki, as part of the 21st Thessaloniki Documentary Festival.

The project is organized by the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in collaboration with the Hellenic Theatre/Drama & Education Network (TENet-Gr) with the support of Thessaloniki Municipality and the Thessaloniki Documentary Festival. “Passages”, the first part of the project “It could be me - It could be you” is an awareness-raising project about human rights and refugees which, coupled with this year’s documentaries on refugees at the TDF, aims at giving the audience a better chance to understand the issue.

“Passages” is a simulation game which allows participants to experience the extremely harsh conditions that refugees face in their effort to find shelter in another country. The theatrical methods used in this workshop engage participants physically, emotionally and mentally in the representation of refugee transition from their everyday lives to the hardship of war and social-political persecutions, their journey from home to a new environment which is rarely friendly, the challenges of bureaucracy and all possible dangers they may face.

In particular, during the workshop, with Ioanna Mitsika, a member of the Hellenic Theatre/Drama & Education Network, in the role of trainer, the participants split into teams in order to form the refugee “families” that would take part in the game and get acquainted with their roles. Blindfolded and separated from their “families”, the players dispersed in the room of action, defining their relationships and their everyday lives at home. This process was violently interrupted by a bomb attack or a social-political persecution, etc. Now they had to find their lost “family” members and reunite. Then the families-teams had to deal with the hardships that refugees face: they had to find shelter to protect themselves from the hostile place they had got to, while on the next stage they fled to another country to seek asylum. Their adjustment to the new conditions was not in any way smooth. They had to deal with the long asylum process in the host countries, their contact with the locals, as well as the solutions they are forced to find in order to survive.

The participants realized the causes and consequences of uprooting, as well as the chain of events that lead refugees to other countries. At the same time, they embraced an attitude of acceptance towards refugees and were asked to think of possible solutions to their problems, particularly their integration into the host country. And finally they took solidarity action in order to raise awareness on their social circle -friends, family, local community- in favor of refugees.

“It could be me - It could be you” is an awareness-raising project about refugees and human rights using theatre and drama. It started in 2015 by UNHCR and the Hellenic Theatre/Drama & Education Network and it is accredited by the Greek Ministry of Education and the International Drama/Theatre & Education Association.

 

Every two seconds, one person is forcibly displaced as a result of conflict or persecution and human rights violations. A post-World War II high of 68.5 million people around the world was forced from their homes as of the beginning of this year.

 

The second part of the project entitled “The Multicolored Immigration of the Butterfly” will take place on Wednesday March 6th 2019 (18:00) at the café I Prigipos” (22, Apostolou Pavlou Str), again as part of the 21th Thessaloniki Documentary Festival. It is an interactive forum theatre performance on issues of solidarity, acceptance of others and combating xenophobia, putting the participants before personal and social stances, ideals, desires and responsibilities.

 

In a special event that took place on Saturday March 2nd, 2019 at Olympion theater, the 21st Thessaloniki Documentary Festival awarded Greek-American filmmaker Louie Psihoyos, the official guest of this year’s edition, with the Golden Alexander, for his contribution to cinema. The director came to Thessaloniki on the occasion of the carte blanche given to him this year by the TDF to select and present to the audience ten of his favorite documentaries. After the ceremony, the audience had the chance to watch in a special screening Louie Psihoyos’ Oscar-winning documentary The Cove (2009), which is recording mass dolphin killings in Japan. A discussion with the director followed. 

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