Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • News
  • Editorial/Opinion
  • Glossary
User account menu
  • Log in

Breadcrumb

  1. Home

Refugees and migration through Oscar-nominated film

By kamala , 26 February 2016
Author
Media for Freedom

UN Radio's first podcast explores refugees and migration through Oscar-nominated film

Actress Saoirse Ronan and UN Radio producer Matt Wells in the General Assembly ahead of her participation in a podcast recording. Photo: UN Radio

Source:UN News.

26 February 2016 – The issue of refugees and migration has risen to the top of the international community’s agenda with the massive flow of people seeking safety and new lives in Europe of late.

But the issue is not a new one – people changing countries has been a constant throughout history, with the United Nations tackling the challenge since its inception in 1946. A recent film screening at UN Headquarters allowed the historical and modern aspects of it to be explored in UN Radio’s first-ever podcast.

The film is the Oscar-nominated movie, Brooklyn, which tells the story of a young woman’s migration from small-town Ireland to Brooklyn, New York, in the early 1950s.

I feel like it is incredibly special that our film is being screened here, and that we have a chance to be included in the immigration conversation.

Its screening was followed by a discussion on the issue of modern migration and the refugee crisis. Taking part were Irish writer Colm Tóibín, on whose novel the film is based, and the movie’s star, Saoirse Ronan who tell UN Radio about how the film’s plot mirrored many aspects of their own lives.

“I feel like it is incredibly special that our film is being screened here, and that we have a chance to be included in the immigration conversation,” Ms. Ronan says in the podcast. Mr. Tóibín notes in it that every modern-day refugee and migrant has an epic story that deserves to be heard.

The biggest surprise, according to producer and presenter of the pilot podcast, Matt Wells, was the way in which those attending the screening and discussion – both UN staff and others – identified so closely with the themes raised by the film.

Brooklyn is nominated for Best Picture, Best Actress in a Leading Role (Ms. Ronan), and Best Adapted Screenplay.

Copyright mediaforfreedom.com

Column
News

Editorial

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6

Recent content

  • Power of social media in modern diplomacy
    11 years 2 months ago
  • Children’s struggles for education focus of award-winning film
    11 years 2 months ago
  • Tourism, contributing to global economic recovery
    11 years 2 months ago
  • ‘HeForShe’ campaign at Davos Forum
    11 years 2 months ago
  • Nepal: distribution of emergency health kits to flood survivors
    11 years 2 months ago
  • IMF downgrades global growth forecast
    11 years 2 months ago
  • Role of light in boosting sustainable growth
    11 years 2 months ago
  • 63 million adolescents out of school
    11 years 2 months ago
  • Uprooting seeds of racism
    11 years 2 months ago
  • Post-2015 agenda will need partnership
    11 years 2 months ago

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6