27th Ji.hlava International Documentary Film Festival
Against the backdrop of the current horrible war events and dark political analyses of the situation in Ukraine, we can also see a certain hope. We are witnessing something unexpected and truly unprecedented – tenacious resistance, solidarity and the ability to join forces. The post-war world can take on various forms. We will look for those in which Ukraine can inspire a revision of what humanity means to us and what specific and practical steps can be taken. It is clear that we have to expand the term’s content and that Ukraine currently represents the most intense challenge for humanity.
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October 2610:00–11:00 AM
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12:00–1:30 PM
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2:30–4:00 PM
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5:00–6:30 PM
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7:30–9:00 PM
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Programme block “ЛЮДИНА_HUMANS / Ukrainian challenge for humanity” is organized with the support of Current Time TV and Goethe-Institut Czech Republic as part of a comprehensive package of measures for which the Federal Foreign Office provides funding from the 2022 Supplementary Budget to mitigate the effects of the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine. |
GUESTSAnna AckermannPolitical analyst at the International Institute for Sustainable Development and a founding member of the Ukrainian NGO “Ecoaction” – Center for Environmental Initiatives. Since the outbreak of the Russian aggression, she has been working on the green reconstruction of post-war Ukraine and coordinating cooperation between Ukrainian and EU organizations on this issue. Vojtěch BoháčWar reporter, political analyst, journalist and a founder and editor-in-chief of the online news server Voxpot. As a freelance journalist he has contributed to Právo daily, Reporter magazine, Deník Referendum daily and A2larm journal. He studied political sciences at the Faculty of Social Studies of Masaryk University in Brno and also studied at several universities in Russia and Ukraine. He gained experience working at The Moscow Times and the Ukrainian Segodnya. He has for a long time been following the Russian-Ukrainian conflict, and this year covered in detail the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. He is the winner of the 2021 Novinářská křepelka Award and is currently preparing a book of reports chronicling Russia and Ukraine‘s decade-long journey to the current war. Marie IljašenkoPoet, writer, book editor and translator. She was born in Kiev and grew up in Police nad Metují. She studied Comparative and East European Studies at Charles University. Her poetry collection Osip míří na jih (Osip Is Heading South) was nominated for the 2016 Magnesia Litera Award in the Discovery of the Year category. Marie Iljašenko was also nominated for the Dresden Lyric Prize (2014) and the Václav Burian Prize (2016). In 2018, she published her second collection, Sv. Outdoor (St. Outdoor), which focuses on the contrasting motifs of home and having to leave home. Martin JirušekAssistant Professor at the Department of International Relations and European Studies at Masaryk University. He specializes in geopolitics and energy security with a focus on Central and Eastern Europe, Russia and the United States. He is also the editor of the Czech Journal of Political Science. Alisa KovalenkoA Ukrainian filmmaker, who put down her camera and signed up to fight for Ukraine driven by the outrage over Russia's invasion of her home and memories of a sexual assault she survived during fighting with Moscow-backed separatists eight years ago. After making her first feature documentary Sister Zo in her final year at university, Alisa made her feature debut Alisa in Warland about the war in eastern Ukraine, which premiered at IDFA in Amsterdam in 2015 as part of the First Appearance competition. Alisa's second documentary film, Home Games, had its world premiere at Sheffield Doc/Fest and was nominated at sixty-five festivals (8 awards). Home Games was also nominated for Best Ukrainian Documentary of 2019 by the Ukrainian Film Academy. In 2019, Alisa Kovalenko became a member of the European Film Academy (EFA). Miriam MacurováClimate campaigner at Greenpeace, where she focuses on European climate policy at an expert level. She focuses in particular on the Green Deal for Europe, the Fit for 55 legislative package and the Czech Presidency of the Council of the European Union and its impact on EU climate policy. Last year she completed her Master's degree in Social and Cultural Ecology at Charles University in Prague. Illia PonomarenkoReporter at Kyiv Independent. He has been reporting on the war in eastern Ukraine since the first days of the conflict. He covers national security issues, military technology and Ukrainian defence reforms. He has been deployed with Ukrainian combat troops in the Donbas war zone and previously also as a UN peacekeeping reporter in Palestine and the Democratic Republic of Congo. In 2020, he received an Alfred Friendly Press Partners fellowship and was selected to serve as a guest reporter for USA Today at the U.S. Department of Defense. Petra ProcházkováCzech journalist and humanitarian worker. Since 1989 she worked for the Lidové noviny daily, in 1992 she went to Moscow as its correspondent and worked in the territories of former USSR until 2001. She covered a number of war conflicts in Asia and Africa, and was involved in crisis reporting. She was expelled from Russia in 2001. She worked in Afghanistan until 2006. After returning to the Czech Republic, she covered the former USSR, Central Asia, and Afghanistan. She is currently working in the editorial office of Deník N. Filip RemundaCzech director, cinematographer and producer. He graduated from the Department of Documentary Film at FAMU. He is a co-founder of the Institute of Documentary Film, which helps to promote Czech films abroad. Together with Vít Klusák, he gained renown with his controversial reality film show about a fictitious hypermarket called Czech Dream. He is the winner of the Pavel Koutecký Award for The Tadpole, the Rabbit and the Holy Spirit. He is one of the main authors of the television series Czech Journal. Oksana StominaWriter, poet, activist and volunteer. She comes from Mariupol, where she survived several weeks of intense Russian shilling and humanitarian crisis. She is the author of a collection of poems, Mariupol on the Front Lines, in which she reflects on the beginning of the Russian invasion and the events of Mariupol in 2014. She is currently working on a book about the ongoing war, and about “medieval cruelty enhanced by modern technology”, and its impact on the lives of individual men and women in the city. Helena TruchláCzech journalist, author of the Středoevropanka podcast, and analyst at the STEM research institute. Sis involved in the Czech Interests project on the EU level. From 2018 to 2022 she was the foreign editor of Aktuálně.cz. She focuses on European affairs and events in Germany. She writes about the future of Czech and European energy management and environmental issues. In the past, she contributed to Hospodářské noviny daily and selected German media. She studied economics and political science in Brno, Berlin, Bordeaux and Edinburgh. She has contributed to Aktuálně.cz’s Chudé Česko 2021 (Poor Czechia 2021) project – a series of reports, interviews and analyses focusing on social inequality and hidden poverty. |
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FILM SELECTIONImages can speak louder than words. Check out our selection of films from the Ji.hlava IDFF’s festival programme. 8TH DAY OF THE WAR (Czech Republic, 2022, Oksana Moiseniuk) |
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