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winner
of the National Council on Crime & Delinquency PASS
Award
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Strong
at the Broken Places:
Turning Trauma into Recovery |
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Resources and Links | Screenings | Viewer Response Visit our movie downloads page to view the first few minutes of Strong At the Broken Places |
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"Strong
at the Broken Places: Turning Trauma to Recovery" shows how deep personal
loss can be turned into a powerful tool for restoring hope and changing
society. This documentary is indispensable to the work of:
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| Recent Viewer Response: |
| "This
taut, gripping short film is a perfect marriage of filmmaking craft and
powerful subject matter. Four individuals who survived unspeakable trauma
in their youth give their stories. A Vietnam Veteran, an abused woman,
a handgun control advocate, and a victim of the Khmer Rouge tell all.
The film weaves their articulate interviews and documentary footage to
make a profound statement about inner strength and empowerment."
-DoubleTake Film Festival "So far I have shown this documentary to over 50 groups of helping professionals. The film says more powerfully in 38 minutes what used to take me hours to explain." - Linda T. Sanford, Author and Social Worker "It is inspiring to see the recognition of these people's ability to stop the cycles of violence and trauma that could have destroyed their lives... Overall, this documentary can serve as a personal call to action, and also as a showcase of how one person through their own personal transformation can change an entire community." Dr. Barry Krisberg President, National Council on Crime & Delinquency "After almost three decades of women's health advocacy and activism we know first-hand, with many other women around the world, of the healing powers of social change work. This film captures so vividly and beautifully how individuals can transform profound suffering and pain into the ability to inspire others to join them in creating a better world." -The Boston Women's Health Book Collective, Authors of Our Bodies, Our Selves "The secret of this age is that courage is not in short supply. What is riveting about this documentary is four people who have been to hell and back, and they are for real. Four people telling how they found the strength to carry on, and the joy in carrying on, is not just inspiring, it is essential." -David Nyhan, Boston Globe "Everyone's life will be better for seeing this film. It is 38 minutes that will provide enormous benefits to anyone in any station of life. People are going to walk away with a better understanding of what others are going through and will be more hopeful about their own problems. I am going to show this to every high school and organization that I can." -Tom Coury, Executive Director - Shaw Foundation "Most people find it hard to imagine how survivors of life's worst atrocities can ever recover. This film shows how it is done. In these direct and intimate interviews the every day courage, humor and wisdom of survivors becomes a gift to all of us." -Judith L. Herman, MD Author of Trauma and Recovery, Consultant to the film "For all of us who work with people who have experienced loss, this remarkable documentary describes the way in which trauma can become the occasion for a life-transforming choice. This film points to the commonalities of different paths to recovery; and with elegance and clarity illustrates the way in which the experience of overwhelming loss became the foundation for a new commitment to life." - David Green, MD, Forensic Psychiatrist -- Essex County Clinic Services, MA |
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