Join Oxfam India at Asian Women’s Film Festival this International Women's Day

Join Oxfam India at Asian Women’s Film Festival this International Women's Day

  • By NA
  • 04 Mar, 2019

Oxfam India campaigns for Ending Violence Against Women and Girls and aims to change patriarchal mindsets that influence violence against women. We have partnered with the International Association of Women in Radio & Television IAWRT to mount the 15th edition of Asian Women’s Film Festival because we believe films can bring about positive gender norms.

The 15th IAWRT Asian Women's Film Festival will be held at the India International Centre (IIC), New Delhi on March 5, 6 and 7, 2019. 

This year's festival will showcase over 50 films from 20 countries directed by Asian women filmmakers from Armenia, Bangladesh, Estonia, India, Iran, Sri Lanka, Syria, Turkey and other countries. 

Besides the general category, the film selections include curated segments on Female Gaze, Childhood, Seven Sisters (films from North East of India) by IAWRT's pool of talented filmmakers - Bina Paul, Samina Mishra, Iffat Fatima, Jerro Mulla, Anandana Kapur, Supriya Suri. One of the festival highlights is a special country focus on Georgia curated by Smriti Nevatia and Soundphile by Shikha Jhingan.

Filmmakers of India

"The 15th edition of the IAWRT Asian Women's Film Festival is being held at a time when women in cinema are central to world discourse in many ways. Discussions about women's participation in cinema and the Me Too Campaigns in the film industry from Hollywood to the 900-film-a year Indian film industry - has put women in cinema at the heart of several critical discussions. It is not surprising therefore that Female Gaze organically became the theme of our festival's 15th edition" observes Nupur Basu, Managing Trustee, IAWRT Chapter India.

What is the Female Gaze
The Asian Women's Film Festival (AWFF) was first held in New Delhi in the year 2005. The festival has grown in strength and popularity over the years with increasing participation of filmmakers. This year the festival organisers received over 700 entries to the festival from 37 countries, the highest ever till date. 

'The AWFF showcases extraordinary narratives from Asian woman from around the world...curating the festival was a personal journey of rediscovering the essence of cinema", says Gauri D Chakraborty, the festival director. 

Women in filmmaking and gender equality in cinema

Besides the film screenings the festival includes the following programmes:

On March 4 - A Roundtable on Me Too in the Indian media and film industry anchored by Paromita Vohra and Nupur Basu.

On March 5 and 6 - A two-day workshop with school girls titled Little Directors conducted by Nina Sabnani and Samina Mishra.


On March 5,6 and 7- an art installation titled Bioscopewalli mounted by design students and artists conceived by the festival director.

All events are from March 4 to 7 at the India International Centre (IIC) in New Delhi. The screenings begin every morning at 9.15 and finish by 9pm. There will be Q and A sessions with visiting filmmakers after the screenings.

 


We campaign to change patriarchal mindsets that influence violence against women  

Read More

Related Stories

India Discrimination Report

15 Aug, 2021

Tumkur, Karnataka

Oxfam India’s First Oxygen Plant in Tumkur

The 300 LPM Oxygen plant, set up under Oxfam India’s COVID-19 response ‘Mission Sanjeevani’, at the 80-bed government hospital at Koratagere in Tumkur in Karnataka will cater to people from 46 surrounding villages. Tumkur MLA, Dalit Leader and former deputy chief minister of Karnataka, G Parameshwara inaugurated the Oxygen plant on 26 July 2021.
Read More

India Discrimination Report

02 Aug, 2021

New Delhi

Delivering Hope and Dignity to Refugees

Oxfam India has been supporting communities worst affected by the pandemic, across India, for over a year now. At the heart of our response are communities already living on the margins such as daily wage workers, transgender communities, informal sector workers and differently abled people. We partnered with HAI to extend our support to refugees from Pakistan living in Delhi.
Read More

Private Sector Engagement

07 Jul, 2021

Assam

Labour Codes Training for Assam Tea Garden Workers

The Labour Codes will have significant impacts on the informal sector workers including the tea garden workers. A need was thus felt to train the workers around these Codes. The existing Plantation Labor Act, 1951 which used to govern the tea industry will be  subsumed under these Codes. Different aspects of the Act will now feature in these four codes. In the above context, Oxfam India in collaboration with Centre for Workers’ Management initiated a training programme for workers across seven districts of Assam, during the month of June. 
Read More

Women Livelihood

13 Apr, 2021

Sitamarhi, Bihar

Mushroom Cultivation Makes Communities Resilience

Oxfam India has been working with these communities through its disaster risk reduction programme since 2012. It was in 2017 that it finally started its livelihood intervention programme — mushroom cultivation and vermicomposting — with the women from the Musahar community. This proved useful during the lockdown in 2020.
Read More

img Become an Oxfam Supporter, Sign Up Today One of the most trusted non-profit organisations in India