Friday, May 4, 2012

Fellowship Rationale: May 4, 2012

 Having lost her entire family to the Holocaust, my grandmother’s perspectives on war and prejudice fostered my lifetime commitment supporting education and human rights.

Reading The Diary of Anne Frank as a teenager was more than history; it was my benchmark against discrimination and demonstrated the power of writing. Although 70 years since WW II, fanaticism and genocide persist in the world but my passion promoting human rights remains a personal and professional ethic.

Although I’ve only "met” Anne Frank through her Diary, I yearn to see where she lived, hid, and wrote. I aspire to write a documentary of her intellectual best in Amsterdam to her most desperate where she died in Germany’s Bergen Belsen Concentration Camp.

The Diary of Anne Frank remains a relevant springboard to develop empathy for human rights and provides compelling frame work comparing current discriminations with the past.

This Fellowship will allow me to journey from the
“The Secret Annex” in Amsterdam to Germany, and create a documentary of Anne Frank’s legacy. The documentary will research and compare human rights issues of WWII with current policy toward minorities in Western Europe and the United States.

My project will reflect sociological implications of prejudice, compare current cultural migrations and related policies in the U.S. with Western Europe’s and improve rapport on important political human rights issues.

Studying Anne Frank’s influence with lens and notepad will help me grow intellectually and spiritually while helping a new generation of students learn about Anne Frank, the Holocaust, the power of documentaries and current issues on human rights.

1 comment:

  1. Mrs. Brown, you have such an incredible opportunity! I'm excited to read future posts, especially as you compare modern, xenophobic legislative policies to those of Anne Frank's period.

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