Film: Acting on Faith: Women’s New Religious Activism in America
Project Description
Acting on Faith: Women’s New Religious Activism in America is a documentary film that offers an intimate look at the lives and work of three American women – one Buddhist, one Hindu, and one Muslim – for whom faith, activism, and identity are deeply intertwined.
In Acting on Faith, we see these women at work, with their families, and at play. We hear them reflect on their experiences, and tell us in their own voices what kinds of identities they seek to build – for themselves and for their communities.
Their stories help us to consider the compatibility of feminism and religion, and the tension of being a voice of critique without alienating one's community or inviting outside prejudice. Their strategies are simple yet surprising:
This film offers insight into, and encourages dialogue on, the powerful streams of thought and action that are being created by women activists of different religious and cultural traditions here in the United States. It is a face-to-face encounter with the women who are pioneering this new religious activism. (Total running time: 42 minutes.)
Preview Clips |
|
Intro - narrated by Diana Eck |
Laila Al-Marayati |
Shamita Das Dasgupta |
Mushim Ikeda-Nash |
DVDs of Acting on Faith: Women’s New Religious Activism in America may be purchased for $40 USD each, including shipping and handling. VHS copies are available by special request.
Please use the order form at the bottom of our brochure (PDF) to place your order. Checks should be made payable to "Harvard University."
If you have any questions, please contact Whittney Barth at staff@pluralism.org or at 617-496-2481.
Rachel Antell Bio
Rachel Antell received an MTS from Harvard Divinity School in 1992 and an MA in Documentary Film and Video from Stanford University in 2001. Her production experience includes two CD-ROMs: "On Common Ground: World Religions in the United States," and "Encarta Africana: An Encyclopedia of Black History and Culture." Her film, "Death on a Friendly Border" (digital video, 25:48) won an Angelus Award, has been broadcast on several PBS stations, and has appeared in festivals around the world including the United Nations Association Film Festival, the Havana Film Festival, and DoubleTake Documentary Film Festival. Rachel Antell served as the Project Manager for Active Voice's Islam Project, a national community engagement initiative that used two PBS documentaries as springboards for interfaith and inter-community dialogue. She currently works in the Bay Area as an independent documentary filmmaker. Her latest projects include acting as associate producer for "Hold Your Breath" a documentary about an Afghani American man's battle with stomach cancer, and his clashes with the American medical system; and serving as the editor for "Occupied Minds," a one-hour documentary about an Israeli and a Palestinian currently living in the US who journey back to their homeland together, produced by Jamal Dajani and David Michaelis and airing on Link-TV.
Featured Women
Laila Al-Marayati is the spokesperson and past president of the Muslim Women's League (MWL), a Los Angeles based organization dedicated to strengthening the role of Muslim women in society. Laila has written articles and participated in numerous conferences addressing issues such as basic women's rights in Islam, reproductive health and sexuality, stereotyping, violence against women, the rights of Palestinians, and international religious freedom. She spearheaded the MWL's efforts on behalf of rape survivors from the recent war in Bosnia, was a member of the US delegation to the UN Conference on Women in Beijing in 1995, was a Presidential appointee to the Commission on International Religious Freedom from 1999 to 2001, and was a member of the State Department Advisory Committee on Religious Freedom Abroad. Laila is a Board-certified obstetrician-gynecologist working as the Director of Women's Health at the Northeast Valley Health Corporation in Southern California and volunteering at the UMMA Community Clinic, the first Muslim free health clinic in the country. She is currently developing a middle school curriculum that approaches human development and sexuality from within an Islamic framework. She and her husband, Salam Al-Marayati, have three children: Malek, Zayd and Jinan.
Shamita Das Dasgupta is a cofounder of Manavi, Inc., the pioneer organization in the US to focus on violence against South Asian immigrant women. Manavi (meaning "primal woman" in Sanskrit) is a non-profit organization for women who trace their cultural heritage to Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. Founded in 1985, Manavi's goal is to increase awareness of women's rights in society, to encourage social change to end all violence against women, and to empower South Asian women. Manavi provides critical supportive services to women who are especially vulnerable to abuse due to their cultural socialization and recent immigration. Its approach is nonjudgmental, non-religious, and nonsectarian. Currently, Shamita is a Clinical Adjunct Assistant Professor of Law at the NYU Law School. She has published over 20 articles in her areas of specialization: ethnicity, gender, and immigration. She is the author of two books, The Demon Slayers and Other Stories: Bengali Folktales (1995, Interlink Books) and A Patchwork Shawl: Chronicles of South Asian Women in America (1998, Rutgers University Press). Her next book on domestic violence in the South Asian American context is scheduled to be published in 2006 (Rutgers University Press).
Mushim Ikeda-Nash is a community peace activist, writer, diversity facilitator, and mother of a teenage son. She has done both monastic and lay Zen practice over the past twenty years in the US, Canada, Mexico, and South Korea. As consulting editor to Turning Wheel: The Journal of Socially Engaged Buddhism, she also contributes a quarterly column on family life and Buddhist practice, and her poetry and essays have been published widely in journals and anthologies such as Shambhala Sun; Innovative Buddhist Women: Swimming Against the Stream; and Dharma, Color, and Culture: New Voices in Western Buddhism. Mushim was coeditor of Making the Invisible Visible: Healing Racism in Our Buddhist Communities, and she has served as chairperson of the San Francisco Zen Center Board Committee on Diversity and Multiculturalism. She was included in the documentary film, Between the Lines: Asian American Women Poets. Mushim lives in Oakland, California with her family, and volunteers as a literature teacher in the Oakland public high school where her son attends.
In addition to the Harvard premiere, we have offered screenings of Acting on Faith in various locations including:
We encourage you to consider hosting a screening in your community, organization, school, or congregation, and the online study guide will assist you in your preparations. From time to time we are able to accommodate requests to present at these screenings. To make such a request, please contact Whittney Barth at staff@pluralism.org or at 617-496-2481.
Rachel Antell's work at Stanford University
Manavi, Inc. (Shamita Das Dasgupta)
Muslim Women's League (Laila Al-Marayati)
Buddhist Peace Fellowship (Mushim Ikeda-Nash)
San Francisco Zen Center (Mushim Ikeda-Nash)
In April 2006, the United Methodist Women's Action Network published an "Action Alert" authored by Assistant Director Kathryn Lohre titled "A New Wave of the Women's Movement is Acting on Faith." This alert was distributed over email and in hard copy to thousands of active members.