Showing posts with label Robert Bilheimer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Bilheimer. Show all posts

Monday, January 24, 2011

Global Distribution Campaign for Not My Life

I urge you to watch the 8 short videos relating to the film NOT MY LIFE; see the full  length film if you can.  Filming across 5 continents, renown director Robert Bilheimer concludes that most of those caught at the heart of human trafficking are children. "We are cannilbalizing our children," he said.

Global Distribution Campaign for Not My Life



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UNICEF - Child protection from violence, exploitation and abuse - 'Not My Life' filmmaker says modern slavery is a children's issue

'Not My Life' filmmaker says modern slavery is a children's issue

By Chris Niles

NEW YORK, USA, 19 January 2011 – A feature-length documentary that exposes the brutal reality of human trafficking, and its disproportionate impact on children, has its world premiere in New York tonight.



VIDEO: 18 January 2011 - Filmmaker Robert Bilheimer discusses 'Not My Life,' the first documentary to examine trafficking and slavery from a global perspective. Watch in RealPlayer

The documentary – ‘Not My Life,’ directed by Oscar-nominated filmmaker Robert Bilheimer and narrated by actress Ashley Judd – was made with support from UNICEF and international non-governmental organizations. It takes an unflinching look at the multi-billion dollar industry that is the modern-day slave trade.

Human trafficking is a global problem affecting large numbers of children. Some estimates say as many as 1.2 million children are trafficked every year, but experts generally acknowledge that the full extent of trafficking is not known.

“We have no idea what we’re dealing with, except that it’s in every country in the world in some form or another,” said Mr. Bilheimer. “And that, to me, is the most frightening part of all.”

Abuse of children

‘Not My Life,’ which took four years to make, examines slavery in five continents – from forced labour in Africa to sexual trafficking in the United States and Southeast Asia. The abuse of children is the common theme.

UNICEF Image
© Worldwide Documentaries
The new documentary 'Not My Life' examines modern slavery and global human trafficking with an emphasis on their impact on children.

“Over time, what became clear to me is that the issue of global human trafficking and modern-day slavery is primarily a children’s issue. Once you make that realization, you have to ask yourself what on earth this means for us as a human family,” noted Mr. Bilheimer.

“We’re cannibalizing our own children,” he added.

Awareness and action

The filmmaker, who also made ‘A Closer Walk,’ a documentary about the worldwide AIDS epidemic, hopes that greater awareness of trafficking and slavery will prompt more action to combat these practices.

“That’s what gives us hope,” he said. “The people on the front lines of this issue – UNICEF, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, the US Government, the NGOs – these are very passionate, dedicated people."

UNICEF - Child protection from violence, exploitation and abuse - 'Not My Life' filmmaker says modern slavery is a children's issue
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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Armand F. Pereira: Not My Life: Globalization and Modern Slavery

Armand F. Pereira

Armand F. Pereira

Posted: January 16, 2011 07:16 PM

On January 19th, 2011, the Lincoln Center's Alice Tully Hall in New York City will hold the world premiere of Not My Life -- a feature-length documentary film about modern-day slavery and global human trafficking, about horrifying practices that affect millions of children, women and men in every part of the world -- a shameful but neglected reality in our "global village".

Globalization has brought us many advantages indeed, but its related deregulation processes have also facilitated some inhuman practices. Bonded labor, debt-related slavery, commercial sexual exploitation and other forms of forced labor and related trafficking have become a global industry -- very conservatively estimated at over $32 billion by the International Labor Organization (ILO) in 2005 and even higher numbers in more recent reports by other organizations, the United States' State Department, etc.

All varieties of forced labor and human trafficking are treated as criminal practices, prohibited in international law and most national legislation. It is covered by international treaties and covenants, including three United Nations Protocols and three ILO Conventions, which are unique in the sense that they include elements of criminal law and its enforcement. The overwhelming majority of governments have ratified these instruments and developed and/or improved related national laws and technical cooperation programs. Yet, the illegal and hidden nature of different forms of forced labor and trafficking makes it very difficult to crack down such practices. Very few victims are rescued on a global basis.

There are indeed many committed institutions and compassionate individuals advocating an end to modern slavery, and many of them are working with governments and their law enforcement agencies. But these efforts need to be strengthened with more financial resources and also proactive media to mobilize public opinion, particularly consumer awareness, as well as private business initiatives, etc. Businesses today cannot afford to run risks of association with any form of child labor and forced labor and related human trafficking in their own business operations and their supply chains, no matter how difficult it may be for them to monitor and control these complex chains.

Particularly in countries with well developed legislation and strong human rights advocacy groups, any company facing allegations of profiting from forced labor exploitation will not only find their reputation severely damaged, but may also face costly lawsuits and criminal prosecution. The same is generally true for at least some of the "worst forms of child labor" defined under ILO Convention 182 and related UN Protocols. These issues have become a significant risk management concern for companies. But few of them are engaged proactively in multistakeholder efforts to crack down on forced labor, child labor and human trafficking. It would indeed help them fence off their own risks if they would become more actively engaged.
Not My Life is a film that can make a difference in informing and mobilizing public opinion and multistakeholder initiatives. Although the topics addressed -- especially female sexual trafficking -- have been seen in television reports, there is a lack of feature length films that effectively depict the problem of modern slavery as a whole targeting a mass audience and, in addition, can provide, at little or no cost, edited versions of the film for educational and fundraising purposes and to help enhance cooperation.

Not My Life is the outcome of four years of planning and hard work by its director, writer and producer, Robert Bilheimer. It was filmed in North and South America, Europe, Southeast Asia, India, and Africa. I first met Robert in Washington, DC, in early 2007 when he was seeking support from United States agencies and international organizations to help him define the focus, scope, funding and outreach of his envisaged new film. As Director of ILO for the United States, I engaged frequently with Robert in his efforts and, in this process, we became close friends as well. Robert's compassionate worldview and artistic style had been evident in A Closer Walk, his highly acclaimed documentary about global HIV-AIDS. This character and style would inevitably lead him to produce a humanistic essay abut slavery that, as he once put it, would

provide a deeper understanding of the way the world is and our relationship to one another as human beings in a planetary society. ...The viewers around the world who see this film will ask themselves: what kind of society have we created that allows traffickers to profit and prey on -- of all things -- human lives? The lives of innocent children? The lives of young women and girls? The lives of men who have been robbed of their dignity and self-respect long before enslaving criminals appeared to take what little they had left?
Yet, the nature of this complex theme required more than a humanistic approach. It dealt with crimes. It required an in-depth knowledge of the international and national instruments and loopholes, and the efforts of some UN agencies, NGOs and government agencies dealing with the scourge of modern slavery and related trafficking. Robert and I had long discussions about how a poetic humanistic perspective could in fact enhance what the UN agencies and NGOs, and many governments and some companies were trying to achieve.
Not My Life's premiere will be a celebration of all those individuals and organizations working to end slavery in our time. Many of those appearing in the film itself will attend the premiere, including guests from several countries, among them, prominent government figures, leaders from NGOs, United Nations agencies and private business, members of the arts and entertainment communities, including the film's narrator, Ashley Judd, and musical contributors Dave Brubeck, Derek Trucks, and Susan Tedeschi. Members of the international press corps will be in attendance to mark what the organizers anticipate will be a watershed event for one of the most complex and troubling human rights issues of our time. The premiere, which will be attended by approximately 1,000 people, will be followed by a limited theatrical run of Not My Life in select theatres in the United States, including New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles.

Source: The Huffington Post
Armand F. Pereira: Not My Life: Globalization and Modern Slavery
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Monday, December 13, 2010

About the Film :: Not My Life :: A Film by Worldwide Documentaries, Inc. :: The Way The World Is

A film about slavery in our time -- a story about the way the world is.

Not My Life is the first documentary film to depict the horrifying and dangerous practices of human trafficking and modern slavery on a global scale.

Filmed on five continents over a period of four years, Not My Life unflinchingly, but with enormous dignity and compassion, depicts the unspeakable practices of a multi-billion dollar global industry whose profits, as the film's narration says, "are built on the backs and in the beds of our planet's youth."

While acknowledging that trafficking and slavery are universal crimes, affecting millions of human beings all over the world, Not My Life zeroes in on the fact that the vast majority of trafficking and slavery victims are indeed children. This fundamental truth, says the film's director, Oscar® nominee Robert Bilheimer, raises profound questions about the very nature of our civilization. "What kind of society cannibalizes its own children?" Bilheimer asks. "Can we do these sorts of things on such a large scale and still call ourselves human in any meaningful sense of the term?"

Not My Life features dignified and inspiring testimony from survivors; depictions of trafficking, exploitation, and slavery in all parts of the world including forced labor in Africa; street begging and garbage picking in India; sexual trafficking in the United States and Southeast Asia; and various forms of child enslavement and abuse in both North and South America. 


Source:  notmylife.org

About the Film :: Not My Life :: A Film by Worldwide Documentaries, Inc. :: The Way The World Is

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