Recently, I watched
Girl Rising, a documentary
which had been listed on
Library Journal’s best documentary/DVD list
(more on those choices later).
Girl Rising is about the power of education to change the world.
It tells the story of 9 girls – in Cambodia, Haiti, India, Nepal, Egypt,
Ethiopia, Peru, Sierra Leone and Afghanistan. Each worked with an author (like Edwidge
Danticat for Haiti), most play themselves in the movie, and an actor (such as
Cate Blanchett or Liam Neeson) reads each story.
Girl Rising is a very impactful film; some are
aspects are very sad, some will make you angry and many will give you
hope.
The documentary runs 103 minutes
and
Girl Rising is so powerful that I would suggest watching
parts at a time.
For example, Junior and
Senior advisories or Geography or Social Justice classes would find much to
discuss through both
the film and the accompanying
web site.
Here is the official trailer:
After sharing the stories of these girls (Sokha, Wadley,
Yasmin, Suma, Asmera, Ruksana, Senna, Mariama, and Amina)
Girl Rising‘s
Call to Action asks viewers to do three things:
- Share the story of Girl
Rising and raise awareness
- Invest – consider a donation
to help fund programs promoting education for girls
- Stand with girls on policy
issues
Other documentaries from the
Library Journal’s list of best-sellers
in 2014 include
Chasing Ice (about global warming; trailer
here) and
Gasland (about
fracking; trailer
here)
. The 2014 list is not yet available online, but here is
Library
Journal’s June2013 list of best-selling documentaries which shows the film
Bully
as number one – we have a copy available at New Trier (trailer
here) and are looking
forward to the upcoming Winnetka Public Library’s program on that documentary this
fall.