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A Voice for the Victim Newsweek World News

#1 User is online   kate 

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Posted 11 March 2007 - 01:28 AM

I thought this is a powerful message so I would like share this great article from Newsweek:


NEWSWEEK

'I Was Transformed'

Angelina Jolie discusses celebrity, refugees and her life in New Orleans.
Angelina Jolie: Actress and Activist


Web Exclusive
By Christopher Dickey
Newsweek


March 11, 2007 - Angelina Jolie began traveling as a goodwill ambassador for the
United Nations some six years ago. She has visited the victims of violence in Africa, Pakistan and Cambodia—first as an observer in the background, then using her fame to draw attention to the plight of the helpless. The movie star spoke to NEWSWEEK's Christopher Dickey about her recent trip to a camp housing Darfur refugees in Chad, her response to critics of 'celebrity tourism' and why she and Brad Pitt like their current home in New Orleans. Excerpts:

NEWSWEEK: What was your original motivation for working with the UNHCR, for doing these kinds of trips?

Angelina Jolie: I started traveling about seven years ago with film. I would go to places like Cambodia and hear about the many refugees in Thailand and hear about the land mines and hear about the history....I remember sitting up for two days straight and reading everything obsessively. I read about the UNHCR and I realized it was an agency that I didn't know anything about: that they were taking care of 20 million people. ... And I remember realizing that I couldn't understand how I had not known that my whole life.

When did it occur to you that you could do something about this directly? Did people approach you or —

I approached them. I think they thought I was a little crazy.

When was this?

Six years ago. I was very nervous to call the U.N. agency at the time. I [was] considered a rebel in Hollywood. At the time I was also a bit of the wild child. So first I went to Washington [to the UNHCR office] and I sat with everybody there and said, "You know, I know you don't know me. You might have heard things about me… And I don't want to bring negative attention to your agency. If you could just help me, I'll pay my way."

I spent the next year and a half going to, first, two camps in Africa, and then Pakistan and Cambodia. And with no cameras and with no press and had the opportunity to have this great education before I spoke at all…. I was transformed in such an amazing way.


But you do have photographers following you now.

It took me a while to agree to do it. I guess I saw that so many times the picture comes before the knowledge and the substance and I certainly didn't want to do that to myself or the organization. And also, I really just was shy. I was shy about sitting on the floor and talking to a woman and having a camera take a picture because I thought it was making less of my conversation with her. But… I was changed by the faces of the people I saw. "It is something that I am incapable of describing...those faces and that place and those people. And so I think it's just—let the people speak for themselves through the camera. And if I can draw you in a little because I'm familiar, then that's great. Because I know that at the end you're not looking at me, you're looking at them.

I think it's fair to say people start out by looking at you, Angelina.
As long as they end up looking at them, that's the point.

Do you worry about people who say this is celebrity tourism?

I don't know if anybody saying that has spent the last six years of their life going to over 30 camps and really spending time with these people. I can't care. At the end of the day, I'm sure a lot of criticism could keep a lot of people from doing this kind of work…

If someone had a direct criticism of my opinion on the issue, if someone had a direct criticism of the image shown because they think it hurts somebody then I will take that into consideration. But there are a lot of people that simply have an immediate gut reaction and they just don't want to combine artists with foreign policy. And hey, I understand. I get it. I know where you're coming from. And to each his own. … You know, I was more shy when I first went into a camp that other field officers would not want me there.

You were worried that you'd get in the way.

Yeah. That's why I brought no media, it's why I sat back. That's why I just helped them load things. And if I felt that I was ever getting in the way, I wouldn't do it. Because I do care about the opinion of the aid worker, I do care about the opinion of the refugee. I care less about the opinion of the person who's never been in the field but has an opinion about celebrity.

Do you still go with so few people? I can't believe you take no one with you…

I take no one. I [go] by myself on a commercial plane and into the field with my backpack.

You still do that?

Yes, I just did that on my last trip. I met the photographer there.

In the camp?

No, in the airport. We didn't even realize we were on the same flight. We landed at like midnight and got up at like 5 in the morning to catch the WFP [World Food Program] plane [to a town near the camp].

When you got there, what were the people saying about their situation?


There are several photographs with this boy tied to a tent pole, and there's also another photograph of a group of women near some tents, and one of them has her ankles chained.

The first time I saw that in the camp [it was] obviously really shocking. They are people who are traumatized by the bombing [by Sudanese government forces attacking villages in Darfur] and by war. The old woman may have had some dementia before. The reality is there are one or two aid workers for every 2,000 refugees. The same with the doctors, the therapists. The basic need there [is] to just try to keep these people safe. To keep the tents up in all the sand storms, try to get the food distributed and basic health-care needs. The [chained] woman started to beat her daughter with anything she could find. She kept hearing voices of the people yelling at her. So she feels constantly under attack. I'm no therapist, so I don't understand all the details. But when I did try to talk to her, she seemed pretty rational. But then she started aggressively telling me that I had to stop them from putting snakes on her. And for the people to stop yelling at her and for the bombs to stop dropping.


And the little boy?

The little boy was a normal 3-year-old [now 7] who disappeared for 48 hours after [his village was bombed]. I can only imagine what he saw. Sure he saw death. And when found, he was found in a state…

As a first reaction you want to remove [the rope]. But the mother, she has four other kids, she's by herself. Therapists visit him, but if [he's] left alone he will disappear or bang himself. I talked to him for like half an hour and just kind of looked at him for a long time before he touched me and there was a little boy in there who was open to a kind sound.… There's a normal little kid right there, but he's got a look of fear. He's nervous to touch. And you can feel that need for safety. The mother unfortunately can't not go work for the other children and can't sit with him all day long and hold him, which is probably what would do some good. But what he needs is probably some serious therapy. [There are] lots of children like him there. Lots of victims of war. [It's a] whole other thing that you usually don't get to address because they have to be so focused on the basic needs of survival. These are the many other casualties of the kind of war that is happening in Darfur.


Do you despair?

Certainly, at times. The first two years I just cried constantly like a woman does.

Oh, like anybody does.


Yes, like anybody does, thank you. I couldn't really talk about the situation without being emotional. And I went through a period of just complete lack of hope. Just feeling like it was way too overwhelming and feeling like I wouldn't be able to make a dent. And then I went through a period of anger that smart, articulate people in power have not been able to answer these issues quickly and clearly and define ways of intervention. And that it just keeps going on. About a year ago, I got a lot of books on international law and I tried to study what was going on—just out of a curiosity about what was this bigger picture. I don't want to have to keep going back to camps, five different times, over the next 30 years of my life, [for situations] that there are no solutions for.

People will look at these pictures of you in Chad and ask, “What can I do?” What should they do?


There are great NGOs like SOS [Austria's SOS Kinderdorp] and there are great NGOs inside and under the U.N. that you could send aid to. It's important for the American people to know that a lot of people believe—I certainly believe—that it has been their outcry and their interest that has motivated our government. I think that the American people have paid attention to Darfur—a really amazing groundswell of people that really care, and are moved and emotional about the things they've seen when it is brought to their attention.

Where would you take the spotlight next?

I want to go back to Cambodia. I would like to understand and see what I can find out about what's happening inside Burma.

You're living in New Orleans right now. Is that just because you like the city or because you wanted to bring attention to New Orleans, too?


A bit of both. Brad was doing a film here and so we were going spend a month here. [We] realized it was a place we liked, we liked the people, I liked the school for the kids. They're very diverse. I liked the other parents. I feel very comfortable with them. We're happy having our children here. Brad is working on rebuilding here.... But for me, just as a mom, I love the other parents and the kids and the schools. I'm starting to work on the education here and the school system here. There's a lot of work to be done.

Link


The pictures are not a photo op. It was a candid pics taken by the UNCHR reporters.

The Boy in the Pic
[i]Among the people Jolie came across was a deranged 7-year-old boy tethered by his family to a tent pole to keep him from wandering away. According to aid workers, he saw his village bombed when he was 3 and hid alone in the bush for two days before his family found him and fled across the border. “I talked to him for half an hour and just looked at him for a long time before he touched me,” says Jolie, “and there was a little boy in there who was open to a kind sound.”

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#2 User is offline   Wonbinlover 

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Posted 12 March 2007 - 02:15 AM

Thanks Kate for sharing. It's a great article and i enjoyed reading it. I love her response when they asked her about celebrity tourism and how she really doesn't care what others think of her because they have their own opinions and she has her own.
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#3 User is offline   Cecilia 

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Posted 12 March 2007 - 10:27 PM

simply adore such high power celeb like her... thank god there's still some ppl like her in the world that are not self indulge.. some ppl need to look beyond her beauty to see the true her ..i love her careless spirit - just do what she can to help - doesnt' matter to her of what the world think of her as long as she's carrying on her duty as a person who love/give and play a little important role in someone's life *sy*

This post has been edited by Cecilia: 12 March 2007 - 10:27 PM

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#4 User is offline   yadfon 

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Posted 22 June 2007 - 09:34 AM

i am happy to see that there are still so many noble stars...be it for publicity or from inner heart, they still rendered their services
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#5 User is offline   grrl 

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Posted 31 January 2008 - 06:03 PM

thanks for the newsweek article... this is why i really like and admire angelina jolie.. she's a great role model and i don't really care if someone says she a homewrecker or whatever. she's really trying to make some difference and that's what people can't take away from her.
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#6 User is offline   natty 

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Posted 31 January 2008 - 06:50 PM

you can tell which one is a celebrity tourism and which one is real help from the heart. angie gets down and dirty, she sits on the sand, dirt, ground or whatever and talk to them, touch them, hold them unlike the others who has body guards surrounding them that way the people don't touch them.
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#7 User is offline   Cecilia 

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Posted 31 January 2008 - 07:17 PM

^plus you can tell by looking at the way they express their face too .. Angie always have this caring look in here. i adore this woman.
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#8 User is offline   grrl 

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Posted 31 January 2008 - 09:00 PM

i totally agree with you two... she doesn't look fake when she's visiting those in refugee camps. plus, she knows what she's going and not just going for some good photo opts opportunities.

remember a couple months ago paris hilton wanted to visit this Rwanda refugee camp (which she never went or is currently postponing it or whatever)?? i mean talk about someone wanting some good photo opts. i was thinking to myself, what the hell, this bitch just wants to make it seem like she gives a damn, but it's just really for her selfish need to look good in the public eye.
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#9 User is offline   natty 

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Posted 31 January 2008 - 09:43 PM

or how about madonna who visit india to "help" the poor but had her body guard surround her to protect her.. omfg..


oh btw i just heard that angie confirmed her pregnancy.. could be twins?
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#10 User is online   Sunny 

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Posted 02 February 2008 - 12:30 AM

oooh another baby, or babies lol. She reminds me of Thailand's King & Queen or Princess Diana.
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#11 User is offline   Cecilia 

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Posted 02 February 2008 - 12:45 AM

View Postnatty, on Feb 1 2008, 02:43 AM, said:

or how about madonna who visit india to "help" the poor but had her body guard surround her to protect her.. omfg..


oh btw i just heard that angie confirmed her pregnancy.. could be twins?

*umm* .. really, that's exciting news for me .. wow. . we get to see more babies *ioi*
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#12 User is offline   kluay 

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Posted 04 February 2008 - 11:32 AM

I am a fan of how she uses her celebrity power to do good thing so smart what a nice article to read Thank so much kate :lol:
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