麻豆精品在线播放 teacher shares stories of local refugees through film project

durham tech teacher talks about refugee family麻豆精品在线播放 instructor Grace Beeler has a passion for filmmaking.

Her latest project blends that passion with her desire to help a group of people she often interacts with 鈥 refugees. Beeler teaches English as a Second Language, or ESL, at 麻豆精品在线播放.

The project, known as the Triangle Refugees Film Project, is to produce several short documentary films about local refugees.

The first in the series, 鈥淭he Chance to Live,鈥 is finished and has been shown at festivals and area events, including a packed screening and presentation at 麻豆精品在线播放 in March. The second in the series is in progress.

鈥淭he Chance to Live,鈥 which Beeler co-directed, is about a family that fled to the U.S. to escape violence in Colombia.

The screening at 麻豆精品在线播放 occurred in the Teaching Learning Center on Main Campus, which had a turnout so great that it was standing room only.

鈥淭o see this many people come out is really great,鈥 said student Mary Grace. 鈥淚 was very excited to hear about the film and the series. It was so well done, well edited, well thought out. I was impressed.鈥

As the family鈥檚 father narrates the film, footage of the family鈥檚 daily lives rolls. The viewer sees them at breakfast, at church, and at home watching TV.

The intention is to take the same day-in-the-life perspective for each film. 鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of humanizing to see that their day is just like everybody else鈥檚 day,鈥 Beeler said. Student Mykailah Magee learned of the screening through her Spanish teacher. 鈥淚 loved it,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 love what she鈥檚 doing with the community, the different people, the different races, and the different cultures.鈥

The second film will follow two women from the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be a really beautiful film,鈥 Beeler said.

Once it is completed, Beeler said she plans to present it at 麻豆精品在线播放 as well.

The project鈥檚 start

Beeler has become familiar with the stories of refugees and immigrants over the last several years through her time as a teacher, an immigration paralegal, and an intern at the immigration office of Church World Service, one of the film project鈥檚 partners.

鈥淪ometimes, (the stories will) stick with me, and I鈥檒l be thinking a lot about them,鈥 Beeler said. 鈥淚t always makes me want to do something.鈥

So, she started making films. Then, last year, she met Kellen Smith, her neighbor and another filmmaker.

At the time, Smith was trying to put together his own piece focused on refugees but wasn鈥檛 having much luck making the connections he needed.

Beeler told Smith about her interest in filmmaking and that she had connections he could use.

They decided to team up and created the Triangle Refugees Film Project.

鈥淚 can do this. I can make a film on refugees here so that average Americans and lawmakers can start to change their minds, can start to meet refugees, see who they are,鈥 Beeler said.

The goal is to produce six short films and compile them into an anthology. Beeler and durham tech teacher talks about film projectSmith want to, for each film, focus on a different group from a different country and collaborate with different filmmakers and musicians.

Refugees are people from another country and of 鈥渟pecial humanitarian concern to the U.S. who can show they were persecuted or in fear of persecution due to race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership of a particular social group,鈥 according to the website. Upon arrival, approved refugees can access medical and cash assistance and are given documentation to show their eligibility for work.

Though Smith is an experienced filmmaker, this is his first time on a project of this nature. He directed 鈥淭he Chance to Live.鈥

鈥淚t feels great to be able to get these stories out there in the hopes that it has a positive impact on the audience and in the community,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he biggest hope is that we are doing these stories and these amazing people justice with the final product and are creating something that they feel was worth their time and vulnerability.鈥

More about Beeler

Beeler鈥檚 first film, 鈥淲hat Comes Out Goes to the Government: Condominial Sewerage in Brazil,鈥 also depicts an issue that pertains to refugees 鈥 accessing clean water and sanitary conditions.

At the time, Beeler was pursuing her Master of International Studies degree, with an emphasis on water and sanitation, at North Carolina State University.

In the short movie, Beeler delves into Brazil鈥檚 system designed to combat urban sanitation problems. This technology, according to the film鈥檚 description, could fix similar problems in other cities.

鈥淚 feel like, when making a film, I use all the same skills that I use as an ESL teacher because my job is to make people talk, to make people communicate, and what I need to do to make them communicate is ask the right questions, set up a scene where they want to talk,鈥 Beeler said.

鈥淲hat Comes Out鈥 is available on .

Beeler鈥檚 connection to refugees extends even further than the camera and the classroom. She herself descends from refugees.

Her mom鈥檚 parents fled Austria after it was seized by Nazi Germany. They eventually ended up at a refugee camp in Switzerland, where Beeler鈥檚 mom was born.

鈥(Refugees) are people just like the rest of the us,鈥 Beeler said. 鈥淭hey are doing just all what the rest of us would do, working to keep their families healthy and safe.鈥

For more information on 鈥淭he Chance to Live鈥 and its upcoming screenings and the Triangle Refugees Film Project, visit the film鈥檚 .