News from Tribe of Heart , Producers of PEACEABLE KINGDOM: THE JOURNEY HOME and THE WITNESS
Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home
wins Best Feature Documentary award
at Peace on Earth Film Festival
NEW: Video highlights of our Chicago premiere weekend!
Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home
Dear friends, Does aspiring to a life of nonviolence include consideration of the individuality and inherent worth of nonhuman animals? According to Chicago’s Peace on Earth Film Festival, it surely does.On February 27th, more than 300 people attended a standing-room-only screening of Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home at the Chicago Cultural Center, and several dozen more waited patiently in line but unfortunately had to be turned away for lack of space. The festival gave our film a superb time slot, Saturday at 8:15 PM, and would later bestow upon it the Best Feature Documentary award. Equally significant, the audience gave the film a standing ovation and offered their heartfelt appreciation during the Q&A that followed, and in their written comments that we collected after the screening. You can read a sampling of their responses in the right column of this newsletter, and watch a short video of the highlights of our participation in the festival here. On Sunday afternoon, documentary subject Harold Brown participated in the festival’s Peacemakers’ Panel. The moderator opened and closed the event with a reference to Howard Lyman’s statement at the end of Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home, when he says:
Harold built on this theme and spoke eloquently about what it means to practice the golden rule, as well as the need to embrace and educate--rather than judge and dismiss--those who are simply unaware of how their actions are impacting others.
Judge Sophia H. Hall had come to the festival to share her work in the field of restorative justice, which seeks to replace the failed concepts of crime and punishment. She described how the fabric of community could be restored by bringing victims and victimizers together with a focus on restitution and reconciliation. She shared the idea of the “platinum rule,” which she defined as treating others not as we would wish to be treated, but as they would wish to be treated. The embrace of Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home by this visionary festival, which is devoted to a holistic model of working toward peace, was an inspiring experience for all of us involved in making the film. This festival’s diverse program helped us appreciate that while the path to peace may start in many places, and focus on many different issues, the destination is always the same: awakening conscience, protecting the innocent, and restoring personal, social and ecological balance. We thank executive director of the Peace on Earth Film Festival, Nick Angotti, as well as his fellow review committee members, Clayton Monical, John D. Hancock, Dan Nurczyk, and Milissa Pacelli, for an unforgettable experience. We also extend our gratitude to Marla Rose and John Beske of EarthSave Chicago and Vadim Moskalin of ChicagoVeg for their help with publicity, which was instrumental in making this event such a success. We are thrilled to find that, along with the peace community, a growing number of folks in the environmental community are now expressing interest in Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home. Everything we have seen so far suggests that this film is capable of engaging and inspiring people from all walks of life who might previously have avoided or rejected the issues it explores. As we move into the next leg of our film festival run and work toward the film’s release on DVD, we are ever grateful to those whose support and encouragement made it possible for this film to be created, as well as those whose generosity will make it possible for us to realize its tremendous potential. Warm wishes, James LaVeck and Jenny Stein Co-founders, Tribe of Heart Left to right: Filmmakers Jenny Stein and James LaVeck, film subject Harold Brown, associate producers Kevin Smith and Eric Huang Tribe of Heart needs your support now, more than ever, to keep the momentum moving and to develop the resources and support needed to launch the DVD, along with associated outreach programs. Please help us bring this incredible tool to people who are eager to put it to use in communities around the world! Donations can be made online or mailed to: Tribe of Heart, PO Box 149, Ithaca, NY 14851 | Audience Comments at Chicago's Peace on Earth Film Festival Speechless. Better than ‘well done.’ Impacted me to my core. Thank you for this remarkable film. I was somewhat cynical at the outset, expecting an overly sentimental look at animal welfare. You’ve produced something much more — a difficult and incisive look at what it means to treat another being with dignity. Your stress on the notion of individuality is what strikes me as the most powerful. We should act based not on the emotions inspired within us exactly, but on our understanding of what the objects of our actions are capable of — in particular, their self-willed potentialities. So well done! A reminder that intelligence and heart is not exclusively embodied in human form. A great moral tale. We must take action. This film has changed my thought process. Thank you. I was moved by the compassion and thoughtful dialogue presented in this eye-opening film. The footage of the exchange between the animals and caretakers was so extraordinary. Thank you for this important work. A work of profound beauty and humanity. A wonderful film – very humbling and thought provoking. I learned a lot. An extremely important film, created with amazing sensitivity... Like so many, I have not listened to my better instincts. Thanks to your film, I will make sure my grandchildren learn to love and appreciate animals. Beautiful — well made — speaks the truth in a way that no one can ignore. Thank you. An amazing, wonderful film. Beautifully shot and edited. Great story – goes straight to the heart! This film was very eye-opening and more importantly, heart and mind opening for me. I have been trying to stop eating meat, and this film has helped me take another step in that direction. Thanks for a moving experience and for the encouragement to have the courage to do the right thing. Watch a preview of Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home Visit the film's official web site Join us in Washington, DC The 18th annual Environmental Film Festival in the Nation's Capital will be held March 16-28, showing 130 films at more than 50 venues around Washington, DC. The vital connections between food and the environment will be a special theme of this year's festival. Sat., March 27 at 12:15 PM Environmental Film Festival in the Nation's Capital Carnegie Institution, 1530 P St. NW followed by Q&A with filmmakers Jenny Stein & James LaVeck and film subject Harold Brown FREE Event Click here for an evite with complete details that can also be shared with your friends in the DC area. If you are on Facebook and plan to attend, let us know, and invite your Facebook friends, too! Vancouver, BC, Canada Click here for an evite with complete details that can also be shared with your friends in Vancouver.Sun., March 21 at 4:40 PM Canada International Film Festival Edgewater Casino 311-750 Pacific Blvd. South Tickets: $7 (purchase here) If you are on Facebook and plan to attend, let us know, and invite your Facebook friends, too! |
Tribe of Heart is a 501(c)(3) charitable organization that produces award-winning, life-changing films about the journey of awakening conscience and the ethics of the human-animal relationship.
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