Lancaster Peace Film Festival
Turtles Can Fly - January 30, 7 pm, Community Mennonite Church of Lancaster (328 West Orange St) Click for flyer.
The lives of the Kurdish people living in Iraq right before the US invasion is seen through the eyes of a group of refugee children, led by a thirteen-year-old boy, Kak Satellite. Satellite organizes the clearing of the minefields and trades the unexploded mines for other goods the children need. The cast of children consists of non-actor locals, adding to the reality of this eye-opening and inspiring film.
Why We Fight – January 31st, 7 pm, Lancaster Friends Meeting (110 Tulane Ter)
The film presents how Dwight D. Eisenhower’s warning of an impeding “military industrial complex” is strikingly similar to the state of the world in 2004. Featuring various responses to the question “Why We Fight?” and interviews with those involved the contemporary US military industrial complex, this film seeks to understand how a nation for the people and by the people came to be dependent on a state of constant war.
The Ground Truth – February 1, 7pm, Unitarian Universalist Church of Lancaster (538 W Chestnut St)
Sir, No Sir – February 2, 7 pm, East Chestnut Street Mennonite Church (434 E Chestnut Street) Click for flyer.
A groundbreaking work, this film details the largely untold stories of the American soldiers who resisted the Vietnam War. From demonstrations at military bases, to over 500,000 desertions, to the refusals of whole units to fight, the GI anti-war movement of the 60’s has had lasting effects on the military and war itself. The poem by Bertolt Brecht that became an anthem of the GI Movement perhaps summarizes it best,
“General, man is very useful.
He can fly and he can kill.
But he has one defect: He can think.”