Hearts of Hate is a 1995 Canadian documentary film about the Canadian White Supremacist movement of the early to mid-1990s. It profiles the four most active groups in Canada at the time Heritage Front, Aryan Nations, Church of the Creator and Canadian Liberty Net. Directed and produced by Peter Raymont, the film primarily studies the involvement of young Canadians in the activities of these groups, which were making frequent headlines at the time in Canada. The documentary was intended for in-classroom viewing, though it aired nationally on CTV.
Interviews in the documentary include Wolfgang Droege, the deceased leader of the Heritage Front, George Burdi, former lead singer of RaHoWa and Alicia Reckzin a former member of the Anti-Racist Action.
The film erroneously claims that Dunbarton High School is located in Scarborough, Ontario when in fact it is located east in the neighboring city of Pickering.
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OrigineEtats-Unis GenresDocumentaire ThèmesLe racisme, Documentaire sur la discrimination, Documentaire sur le droit, Documentaire sur la guerre, Documentaire historique, Documentaire sur une personnalité, Politique Note73% The film is about the harsh period of Reconstruction after the American Civil War in rural southern states. The period was marked with a number of deadly race riots and angry insurgencies in the south. The movie focuses on the rise of the Ku Klux Klan from a six-member group of veterans of the Confederate Army into a terrorist organization. It tells of the battles between Ku Klux Klan First Grand Wizard Nathan Bedford Forrest and Governor of Tennessee William Gannaway Brownlow, the Memphis and New Orleans Massacres, the Lowry War in Robeson County, North Carolina, as well as Arkansas' conflict with the clan. The footage consists of interviews with top historians, historical content, and recreated segments as told by narrator Mike Hodge. Director David Padrusch makes a cameo appearance as a 'Freedmen Bureau Agent' who is executed by the Ku Klux Klan in the film.
En 1969, l’imam Abdullah Haron fut enfermé et tué en détention au Cap. Leader de communauté, très apprécié, il tentait de faire prendre conscience à ses congénères, peu actifs, de la détresse dans laquelle ils vivaient sous l’apartheid. Durant les années 1960, l’imam Haron est devenu plus actif et a commencé à voyager à l’étranger pour soulever des fonds destinés aux familles pauvres. Mélangeant animation, interviews et archives, ce court-métrage explore les dernières années de la vie de l’imam et sa mort. Le récit est dit par son petit-fils, le réalisateur, à travers les yeux d’un enfant.