The “Global Peace, Security, and Human Rights” Lecture Series Presents

Jung (War): In the Land of the Mujaheddin

Wednesday, January 23 / 7:30 pm / Campbell Hall
General public $6 · UCSB students $5
Tickets available at the UCSB Arts & Lectures Box Office: 893-3535\

"An Afghanistan few outsiders have seen, but after watching this film you'll never forget it." The Guardian

Winner of the Nestor Almendros Prize at the 2001 Human Rights Watch Film Festival, this unflinching documentary looks at the human toll of 20 years of war in Afghanistan. Essential viewing. (Fabrizio Lazzaretti, Alberto Vendemmiati, 2000, 114 minutes)

 In this beautifully produced look at Afghanistan today, a surgeon and a war correspondent decide to join forces and set up a hospital in a country that has had to cope with various wars for the last twenty years. After the Russians, the Taliban took society firmly into their grasp. Houses and schools have been burnt down, sons killed on the battlefield and almost everybody is hungry, an Afghan woman explains from behind her veil, perforated only by a few air holes. Women are beaten up in the street if they are wearing sandals that show part of their legs, so everyone is terrified of breaking the extremely strict rules of the Taliban, another woman explains. Meanwhile, tanks have conquered the mountains, soldiers are trigger-happy and the rugged, stunning landscape is strewn with mines, which are stepped on every day by countless innocent victims. The new hospital tries to help all of these war victims, but it is banging its head against a brick wall. The Italian surgeon gets discouraged at times, because he knows that every day brings the same calamities: one after the other, people are brought in with crushed legs and skulls, and the situation is nowhere near ending.

The "Global Peace, Security, and Human Rights" lecture series is sponsored by the UC Institute for Global Conflict and Cooperation, UCSB Arts & Lectures, Global and International Studies Program, Global Peace and Security Program and Interdisciplinary Humanities Center. It is being put on in partnership with the Santa Barbara Committee on Foreign Relations, Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, PAX 2100, International Studies Association at Santa Barbara City College, and the International Studies Program at Ventura College.





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