HARVEST OF PEACE
HARVEST OF PEACE
•
29m
HARVEST OF PEACE
A Citizen-To-Citizen Peace Effort in Central America
Nationally Broadcast on Free Speech TV
World premiere, Telluride Film Festival
“Best Nonfiction Film,” San Antonio Cine Festival
“Curator's Choice,” New England Film Festival
Directed by Robbie Leppzer
Produced by Lisa Berger
Music by Holly Near, Carlos Mejía Godoy, Shadowfax, Sotavento and more
29 minutes • 1985/2021 Digitally Remastered HD Version • Closed Captions
www.turningtide.com/harvest-of-peace
ABOUT
During the height of the U.S.-backed Contra war in Nicaragua in the mid-1980s, hundreds of North Americans traveled to this Central American country to volunteer their labor in the cotton and coffee harvests. HARVEST OF PEACE is an intimate and moving portrait of a group of 150 U.S. citizens who spent two weeks in a remote village, seeing for themselves the impact of war on the Nicaraguan people.
The film offers glimpses into the lives of campesinos (farm workers) who speak passionately about how they have been affected by the Sandinista revolution and their hopes for change in their country. The North American volunteers express their concerns about the role of the U.S. government in the war and their heartfelt desire to build bridges of friendship and peace with Nicaraguans.
Scenes of daily life—women making tortillas, washing clothes by hand, picking cotton, children playing—contrast with the harsh realities of the ongoing war. Villagers sort through the charred remnants of a house after a Contra attack, while the U.S. volunteers dig bomb shelters. In lighter moments, the North Americans and Nicaraguans play baseball, dance, and relax together at the beach.
HARVEST OF PEACE blends personal testimony with evocative images and music to create an impressionistic portrait of an inspiring citizen-to-citizen peace effort.