Join the World Policy
Institute,
Center for International Art in Community (CIAC),
and CivWorld for a screening of Pangea Day at
Demos.
Pangea
Day is a global event bringing the world together
through film. On May 10, 2008, live events in Cairo, Kigali,
London, Los Angeles, Mumbai, and Rio de Janeiro will be
linked to produce a 4-hour program of powerful films, live
music, and visionary speakers. The program will be broadcast
live to millions of people worldwide through the internet,
television, and mobile phones.
Why? In a world where people
are often divided by borders and conflict, it's easy to lose
sight of what we all have in common. Pangea Day seeks to
overcome that — to help people see themselves in others —
through the power of film. Movies alone can't change the
world. But the people who watch them can.
The 24 short films to be
featured have been selected from an international
competition that generated more than 2,500 submissions from
over one hundred countries. The films were chosen based on
their ability to inspire, transform, and allow us see the
world through another person's eyes. Details on the Pangea
Day films can be viewed
here.
In 2006, filmmaker Jehane
Noujaim (Control Room, Mokkatam, Different Truth,
Startup.com) won the
TED Prize, an annual award granted at the TED
Conference. She was granted $100,000, and more important, a
wish to change the world. Her wish was to create a day in
which the world came together through film. Pangea Day grew
out of that wish. Watch
Jehane Noujaim’s
2006 acceptance speech now.