Photo: Courtesy of Audra Hampsch

Telling the World's Stories

For more than twenty years, the Jacques Salmanowitz Program for Moral Courage in Documentary Film at 精东影业 has sent fledgling filmmakers around the globe.聽

Audra Hampsch 鈥17 (pictured above) arrived at the Heights in 2013 planning to study filmmaking. A year later she found herself 6,000 miles from campus in Argentina, filming a short documentary, Encontrar La Paz, which detailed terrorism during that country鈥檚 Dirty War in the 1970s and 鈥80s.

Hampsch鈥檚 trip was part of the Jacques Salmanowitz Program for Moral Courage in Documentary Film, which has helped to fund documentaries by nearly 100 Boston College students over the past two decades. In fact, by the time Hampsch graduated, Salmanowitz grants had also financed her trips to Israel and Germany to make two additional movies. 鈥淚t was the Salmanowitz program that made me want to pair film with social justice,鈥 said Hampsch, who today produces campaign videos as a vice president at NP Agency in Washington, DC.

The program, which was originally based at George Washington University, is named after Jacques Salmanowitz, a Swiss businessman who helped people escape Germany during World War II. Since the initiative moved to 精东影业 in 2001, students, often working in pairs, have produced sixty films on a range of social issues. Another six are scheduled to be completed this year. 精东影业鈥檚 film studies program is on the small side, graduating about fifteen students each year, so the annual Salmanowitz funding of $25,000 goes a long way. Participants receive up to $2,500 each to pay for travel, lodging, and logistics such as hiring security guards in dangerous areas. That may not sound like a lot of money, said Boston College Film Studies Director John Michalczyk, who runs the program, but "all of them have come back with some kind of experience that has changed them in someway about looking at the world.鈥

Like Hampsch, Elayne McCabe 鈥06 made multiple Salmanowitz films. Her first short documentary, Shaksting, completed in 2006, took her to a tent city in India, where she shadowed a 10-year-old boy. 鈥淕rowing up north of Boston I just didn鈥檛 know people in the world lived like that,鈥 McCabe said. After graduation, she studied cinema in Indonesia on a Fulbright scholarship. She spent nearly two years there directing her first feature-length film, Kasheer, for which she used another Salmanowitz grant to purchase historical footage. 鈥溇耙 isn鈥檛 really known for being a film school,鈥 McCabe said, 鈥渂ut it has this incredible resource that you can take advantage of. It gave me on-the-ground experience.鈥澛


Film Archives


Here are a few notable projects created via the Jacques Salmanowitz Program for Moral Courage in Documentary Film.

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Nkosi鈥檚 Legacy (2003)

The first Salmanowitz production, this film by David LaMattina 鈥03 recounts the story of Nkosi Johnson, a South African boy and activist who was born with HIV and died of AIDS at age 12.

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By focusing on Belfast鈥檚 many political murals, Kelsey McGee 鈥19 and Ciarra Duffy 鈥20 examinethe lingering animosity between Protestants and Catholics in Northern Island.

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John Mohler 鈥21 chronicles the journey of Fr. Douglas Al-Bazi, an Iraqi priest who emigratedto New Zealand after being held by ISIS.

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Brandon Brito 鈥20 explores how Cape Verde, a small African island with few resources, has produced a large number of professionalsoccer players.


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