In 1983 a group of 154 children aged 3 and 17 years old traveled alone from Europe to Montevideo. They were children of political exiles from Uruguay, who were unable to come back to their own country; they sent their kids to know their relatives and home country. That human sign, charged with a political message, took part in children’s identity development. Nowadays, six of them still remember that day, when a crowd received them singing all together “your parents will come back”.

Fernanda Ocaña, a 60-year-old drag artist from Seville, left her hometown at 14 to build a life in B...
Rites and operation of the circumcision of thirty Songhai children on the Niger. Material of this fi...

In 1973, eleven year old Miguelito was discovered singing in the San Juan airport by the legendary N...

Based on the book by Naoki Higashida, filmmaker Jerry Rothwell examines the lives of five non-speaki...

Enduring 28 days of relentless construction labor, Frank struggles to prep a house for painting amid...

During the 1965 mass killings to eliminate the Indonesian Communist Party, the new regime banned sch...

In May 2011, a massive tornado ripped through Joplin, Missouri. With pulse-pounding firsthand footag...

Children get ready to start the first grade. They start learning the first letters.

On May 8, 1989, Sports Illustrated ran an article about Ultimate frisbee… about a team with no name ...

Not My Life comprehensively depicts the cruel and dehumanizing practices of human trafficking and mo...

Maurice Hines -- actor, director, singer, and choreographer -- navigates the complications of show b...

Dos Islas is a poetic story about old age, family and the bond between a granddaughter and a grandmo...

Voices in Wartime is a 2004 documentary that explores the human experience of war through poetry. Co...

A family of artisans opens the doors of their workshop to share their daily lives, their beliefs, an...

This poetic core in youngsters is also touched in Stanukina's less known Your very personal poetry (...

Images of Argentinian companies and factories in the first light of day, seen from the inside of a c...