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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260412
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260413
DTSTAMP:20260403T155156
CREATED:20260214T171331Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260325T175553Z
UID:25142-1775952000-1776038399@nhccnm.org
SUMMARY:AfroMundo Festival: “True Justice”
DESCRIPTION:Sunday April 12\, 2026\n11:00 am \nNHCC | Wells Fargo Auditorium \n2026 AfroMundo Festival: “Futurism: Manifesting the Envisioned”\nFeatured Regions: U.S. & U.S. Territories: Puerto Rico\, Virgin Islands\, Guam\, American Samoa\, Mariana Islands \nDocumentary Screening of “True Justice: Bryan Stevenson’s Fight for Equality.” Directed by George Kunhardt\, Peter W. Kunhardt and Teddy Kunhardt. 2019. 1hr 42m. True Justice: Bryan Stevenson’s Fight for Equality\, follows 30 years of EJI’s work on behalf of the poor\, the incarcerated\, and the condemned. The film won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Social Issue Documentary\, and is the winner of the National Association for Multi-ethnicity in Communications’ 26th annual Vision Award and a Peabody Award. \nThe 2026 AfroMundo Festival is free to the general public with limited seating and includes films\, concerts\, literature\, oral traditions\, panel discussions\, culinary and other arts to foster a greater understanding of our shared humanity. \nPLEASE MAKE YOUR RESERVATION HERE!
URL:https://nhccnm.org/event/afromundo-festival-documentary-screening-true-justice-bryan-stevensons-fight-for-equality/
LOCATION:Roy E. Disney Center for Performing Arts: Wells Fargo Auditorium\, 1701 4th Street SW\, Albuquerque\, NM\, 87102
CATEGORIES:Film,Seasonal Events,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://nhccnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/AfroMundo-2026-1.1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260412
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260413
DTSTAMP:20260403T155156
CREATED:20260228T173629Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260325T175656Z
UID:25146-1775952000-1776038399@nhccnm.org
SUMMARY:AfroMundo Festival: “Fight for Equality"
DESCRIPTION:Sunday\, April 12\, 2026\n3:00 pm \nNHCC | Wells Fargo Auditorium \n2026 AfroMundo Festival: “Futurism: Manifesting the Envisioned”\nFeatured Regions: U.S. & U.S. Territories: Puerto Rico\, Virgin Islands\, Guam\, American Samoa\, Mariana Islands \nPanel Discussion with Darlene T. Gomez\, attorney for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Relatives; Abraham Paulos of BAJI (Black Alliance for Just Immigration); Dr. Estévan Rael-Gálvez\, President and founder of Native Bound-Unbound; and Azadeh Shahshahani\, Legal and Advocacy for Project South. Moderated by Dr. Belinda Deneen Wallace\, Director of UNM’s Liberal Arts and Integrative Studies Program. \nThe 2026 AfroMundo Festival is free to the general public with limited seating and includes films\, concerts\, literature\, oral traditions\, panel discussions\, culinary and other arts to foster a greater understanding of our shared humanity. \nPLEASE MAKE YOUR RESERVATION HERE! \nPanel discussion with:\nDarlene T. Gomez is a lifelong native of Northern New Mexico\, having been born and raised in Lumberton where her ancestors homesteaded before New Mexico was incorporated into the United States. She has been practicing law for over 19 years and specializes in Indian Law\, Complex Family Law\, and advocating on behalf of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women & Relatives (MMIWR). Darlene attended the University of New Mexico School of Law where she first began her pro bono work fighting for clean water in her hometown of Lumberton. She was the inaugural recipient of the Carlos Vigil Scholarship\, among numerous other awards while in school. Darlene is tirelessly passionate about giving a voice to the voiceless through her pro bono work. She has been a fierce advocate for primary and secondary victims of the MMIWR crisis since 2001 and spends much of her time organizing rallies\, mentoring and advocating for secondary victims\, preparing and distributing press releases\, and serving as the attorney for 15 families of MMIWR victims. She is a founding member of the New Mexico MMIW Task Force and serves as the general counsel for the 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization Medicine Wheel Ride. She is widely considered a leading expert in MMIWR throughout the US and her persistent efforts on behalf of victims have led to an increase in domestic as well as international media attention for the MMIWR Public Health Crisis\nhttps://dargomezlaw.com/mmiw/ \nAbraham Paulos is a nationally recognized communications strategist\, writer\, and advocate who has spent over two decades driving the movement for human rights and immigrant justice. His work centrally focuses on the complex intersection of immigration\, race\, and criminalization\, with a specific emphasis on the unique challenges faced by Black migrants. Abraham currently serves as the Deputy Director of the Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI). His career features influential leadership roles\, including serving as the Executive Director of Families for Freedom. He has also been a researcher for Human Rights First and a Program Director for Life of Hope\, a community-based organization serving low-income immigrants. A powerful voice in public discourse\, Abraham has highlighted systemic issues within the U.S. deportation system through his writing for outlets like Foreign Policy Association\, Huffington Post\, and City Limits. He has also been featured on major news platforms such as NY Daily News\, Democracy Now!\, Al Jazeera\, The Guardian\, Vice\, ABC News and NBC News. Abraham is a Stateless Eritrean refugee born in Sudan and raised in Chicago. He holds an associate’s degree from Harold Washington College\, a bachelor’s degree from George Washington University and a master’s degree from The New School.\nhttps://baji.org \nDr. Estevan Rael-Gálvez is the President and founder of Native Bond-Unbound: Archive of Indigenous Slavery. He was born and raised in the sovereign landscape of northern New Mexico and southern Colorado\, where the memories and stories of the complex identities that formed these communities were part of his upbringing on the family ranch\, including of “la India Panana\,” the Pawnee woman whose story continues to be told by descendants. Trained as an anthropologist\, historian\, and ethnographer\, he received his BA from UC Berkeley and his MA and PhD from the University of Michigan\, where he completed an award-winning dissertation on Indigenous slavery in colonial New Mexico. He has served as New Mexico State Historian\, Executive Director of the National Hispanic Cultural Center\, and Senior Vice President at the National Trust for Historic Preservation. His work is rooted in lived experience—holding a woven Diné blanket passed down as inheritance and protection or discovering archival traces of several Indigenous people in his family tree\, including Antonia\, listed simply as “India” in the 1750 Santa Fe census\, and Margarita\, an Apache woman named in a lawsuit over her possession.\nhttps://nativeboundunbound.org/home/ \nAzadeh Shahshahani\, Legal and Advocacy Director with Project South\, advances a practice of movement lawyering\, focused on confronting state repression and dismantling systems of surveillance\, incarceration\, and deportation.  Azadeh has organized for two decades to protect and defend migrants and Black and Muslim communities from systemic lslamophobia\, xenophobia\, and anti-Black racism. She also provides support to social justice movements in the Global South\, from Brazil to Palestine. \nAzadeh is a past president of the National Lawyers Guild. She currently serves on the Advisory Council of the American Association of Jurists. She is the author or editor of several groundbreaking human rights reports as well as law review articles and book chapters focused on movement lawyering\, immigrants’ rights\, surveillance of Muslim-Americans\, and using the international human rights framework as a tool for liberation. Her writings have appeared in The Guardian\, The Nation\, MSNBC\, TIME Magazine\, Boston Review\, Slate\, and Los Angeles Times\, among others. \n  \nMODERATOR: Dr. Belinda Deneen Wallace\, Dr. Belinda Deneen Wallace (she/her) is an Associate Professor in the Department of English Language and Literature and the Director of the Liberal Arts and Integrative Studies Program at the University of New Mexico. She teaches classes and conducts research on Global Black Speculative Fiction\, with an emphasis on Afrofuturism and Caribbean speculative literature. Her essays have appeared in a number of journals\, including Small Axe\, Cultural Dynamix\, and Radical Teacher and in several anthologies\, including the forthcoming book\, The Routledge Handbook of Latinx Visions\, where she contributed a chapter that explores the intersections between Caribbean-speculative fiction and Latinx-futurism. Presently\, she is editing a book on power\, gender\, and teaching speculative fiction in the college classroom. Belinda’s edited collection will be published in early 2027
URL:https://nhccnm.org/event/afromundo-festival-panel-discussion-true-justice-bryan-stevensons-fight-for-equality/
LOCATION:Roy E. Disney Center for Performing Arts: Wells Fargo Auditorium\, 1701 4th Street SW\, Albuquerque\, NM\, 87102
CATEGORIES:Film,Speakers,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260414
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260415
DTSTAMP:20260403T155156
CREATED:20260214T180912Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260325T180116Z
UID:25165-1776124800-1776211199@nhccnm.org
SUMMARY:AfroMundo Festival: “Re-imaginings: Power & Transformation”
DESCRIPTION:Tuesday\, April 14\, 2026\n7:00 pm \nNHCC | Bank of America Theatre \n2026 AfroMundo Festival: “Futurism: Manifesting the Envisioned”\nFeatured Regions: U.S. & U.S. Territories: Puerto Rico\, Virgin Islands\, Guam\, American Samoa\, Mariana Islands \nScreening of Puerto Rican documentary “The Bee—A Reflection on Women\, Land\, and Occupation.” Directed by Nelson Varas-Diaz. 2024. 30m. Followed by a panel discussion and Q&A. Panelists include award-winning afro-diasporic siblings\, mulowayi and mapenzi who together comprise Las Nietas de Nonó; Afro-Puerto Rican attorney and former member of the Puerto Rican Senate\, Ana Irma Rivera Lassén; Robert Washington-Vaughns\, founder of Black Men Flower Project; and Tyeshia ‘Ty’ Wilson\, Certified Impact Philanthropy Advisor and award-winning Giving Circle expert. Moderated by Latinx\, transfeminist sociologist\, Amaury J. Rijo Sanchez. \nThe 2026 AfroMundo Festival is free to the general public with limited seating and includes films\, concerts\, literature\, oral traditions\, panel discussions\, culinary and other arts to foster a greater understanding of our shared humanity. Learn more at afromundo.org. \nPLEASE MAKE YOUR RESERVATION HERE! \nLas Nietas de Nonó are the afro-diasporic siblings\, mulowayi and mapenzi. In their creative process\, they evoke ancestral memory through personal archives. Their practice incorporates performance\, found objects\, organic materials\, ecology\, fiction\, video and installation. In 2022\, their solo show\, Posibles Escenarios\, Vol. 1 LNN was presented at Artists Space\, New York a grouping of newly commissioned multimedia works that extend Las Nietas’s explorations of themes such as processes of expropriation and colonial violence against Black communities and the development of microhistories in relation to geopolitics. They created Ilustraciones de la Mecánica in 2016 – a multimedia installation that was later commissioned by the 10th Berlin Biennale (2018) and the 79th Whitney Biennial (2019). They have received the Latinx Artist Fellowship from the US Latinx Art Forum (2022)\, the Rome Prize in Visual Art from the American Academy in Rome (2022)\, the United States Artist Award (2018)\, The Art of Change from the Ford Foundation (2017)\, and the Global Arts Fund from the Astraea Lesbian Foundation for Justice (2017 & 2020). Their art has been shown in Haiti\, Cuba\, the Dominican Republic\, Puerto Rico\, Ecuador\, England\, Germany\, Italy\, Norway\, Scotland\, and the United States. In 2019\, they co-founded Parceleras Afrocaribeñas\, an organization run by Black womxn\, where spaces for environmental and racial justice are created in the face of industrial developments that threaten their barrio of San Antón\, in Carolina\, Puerto Rico. https://www.lasnietasdenono.com \nAnna Irma Rivera Lassén\, an Afro-Puerto Rican attorney and former member of the Puerto Rican Senate\, was born on March 13\, 1955\, in Santurce\, San Juan. Throughout her career\, Lassén has been a steadfast champion for human rights\, particularly focusing on issues of discrimination\, gender violence\, and socio-economic rights. Her commitment to justice was exemplified in her successful challenge against discriminatory courtroom attire rules in the 1980s\, setting a precedent for gender equality. Her expertise and advocacy have garnered recognition from prestigious organizations\, including the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. Lassén’s leadership extends beyond legal circles. From 2012 to 2014\, she was the head of the Bar Association of Puerto Rico\, making history as the first Afro-Puerto Rican and openly lesbian individual to hold the position. Her tenure was marked by significant advancements in promoting gender equality and access to justice. Additionally\, she has contributed to the legislative process\, actively participating in assessments of bills aimed at advancing human rights protections in Puerto Rico. Her impact and dedication have been acknowledged through numerous awards and honors\, including the “Medalla Senatorial Capetillo-Roqué” from the Puerto Rican Senate and the “Martin Luther King/Arturo Alfonso Schomburg Prize.” Notably\, Anna was recognized as one of USA Today’s Women of the Year in 2023\, further underscoring her influential contributions to society. \nRobert Washington-Vaughns: Founder of Black Men Fower Project \nTyeshia ‘Ty’ Wilson is a Certified Impact Philanthropy Advisor\, an award-winning giving circle expert\, and a catalyst for collective action\, driven by the belief that everyone is a philanthropist capable of creating positive social change. As Senior Director of Community at Philanthropy Together\, Ty leverages her lived experiences and expertise in community organizing and coalition building to architect the organization’s global partnership and engagement strategy\, connecting diverse stakeholders to expand the collective giving movement. An energizing public speaker and bold advocate for collaborative\, community-led philanthropy\, Ty has spoken to thousands of people and trained hundreds through Philanthropy Together’s flagship Launchpad programs. She serves as immediate past Chair of HERitage Giving Fund\, the first Black giving circle in Texas\, and sits on multiple national boards including RegisterHER\, Philanos and the Women of Color in Fundraising and Philanthropy. Ty’s strategic\, community leadership experience spans hospitality\, fundraising\, and government sectors. Notably\, she previously served as Assistant to the City Manager and Chief of Staff at the City of Dallas. A proud Dallas native with deep Texas roots\, Ty holds degrees from UT Arlington and UNT Dallas\, and an Executive Certificate in Philanthropic Leadership from Georgetown University \nMODERATOR—Amaury J. Rijo Sanchez: As a Latinx\, transfeminist sociologist\, Sanchez’ work explores the intersections of decoloniality\, activist coalitions\, and cultural and creative expressions\, with focus on Latinx populations. Guided by a decolonial feminist lens\, he investigates how feminist organizing and queer artivism resist colonial infrastructures and generate alternative modes of community-building and survival. Sanchez’ research draws from ethnographic methods and critical theory to highlight the significance of mobilization from the margins in shaping more just futures. \nAfroMundo Festival: Documentary Screening & Panel Discussion—“Re-imaginings: Power & Transformation” | New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs \n 
URL:https://nhccnm.org/event/afromundo-festival-documentary-screening-panel-discussion-re-imaginings-power-transformation/
LOCATION:Roy E. Disney Center for Performing Arts: Bank of America Theatre\, 1701 4th Street SW\, Albuquerque\, NM\, 87102
CATEGORIES:Film,Speakers,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://nhccnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/AfroMundo-2026-1.1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260419
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260420
DTSTAMP:20260403T155156
CREATED:20260221T192323Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260325T180452Z
UID:25268-1776556800-1776643199@nhccnm.org
SUMMARY:Film Screening - Mi America: A Journey of Discovery
DESCRIPTION:Sunday\, April 19\, 2026\n2:00 pm \nNHCC | Bank of America Theatre \n“Mi América: A Journey of Discovery is a documentary film that follows an uncle and nephew as they return to Northern New Mexico to reconnect with the land\, culture\, and community that shaped their family for more than 400 years. \nPLEASE MAKE YOUR RESERVATION HERE! \nWhat begins as a personal journey becomes an exploration of history\, identity\, and discovery. Through interviews\, landscapes\, music\, and lived experience\, Mi América examines the region’s deep religious and cultural traditions\, revealing how history has been preserved and passed down across generations. \nThe documentary also confronts difficult chapters of the past\, including the assimilation of children in schools\, where students were punished for speaking their native language. It addresses the long history of land grants that were stolen or stripped away\, and the resistance movements that emerged in the 1960s as communities fought to protect their ancestral land rights. \nAt its core\, Mi América is about belonging—how culture survives\, how memory endures\, and how the stories we inherit shape who we are”. \nPlease join us for a pre-screening performance with special guest\, Isaac Aragon\, who will open the event. Isaac Aragon is a native New Mexican deeply rooted in blues and soul. Isaacs politically charged musical message promotes love\, peace\, and social justice. Open your heart\, free your mind… And let the healing begin. \nFree community event. Please let us know who will be attending below. \nPLEASE MAKE YOUR RESERVATION HERE! \n\nClick on photo to enlarge
URL:https://nhccnm.org/event/film-screening-mi-america-a-journey-of-discovery/
LOCATION:Roy E. Disney Center for Performing Arts: Bank of America Theatre\, 1701 4th Street SW\, Albuquerque\, NM\, 87102
CATEGORIES:Film,Performing Arts,Theatre
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://nhccnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Mi_América-graphic-1200x1200-1.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260425
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260426
DTSTAMP:20260403T155156
CREATED:20260228T171651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260325T181123Z
UID:25400-1777075200-1777161599@nhccnm.org
SUMMARY:Film Screening: El jugador de ajedrez/The Chess Player
DESCRIPTION:Saturday\, April 25\, 2026\n1:00 pm \nNHCC | Bank of America Theatre \nSpanish Resource Center presenta screening of the Spanish film “El jugador de ajedrez” (The Chess Player)\, shown in its original Spanish version with English subtitles\, followed by a Q&A session and discussion with producer Juan Antonio Casado. “The Chess Player” has won numerous awards—including Best Picture\, Best Actor\, and Best Original Score at WorldFest Houston\, and Best Picture at the Golden Oniros Film Awards (Aosta\, Italy). Year: 2017. Length: 98 minutes. Genre: Drama. Nationality: Spain. Based on the novel of the same title by Julio Castedo. \nAfter Diego Padilla wins the Spanish Chess Championship he meets a beautiful French journalist called Marianne and they soon marry and have a daughter. But when the Spanish Civil War breaks out\, they must move to France in order to keep alive. However\, when the Nazis occupy Paris\, Diego is once again facing danger and is finally sent to jail after falsely being accused of spying. In these circumstances Chess will be his only chance of survival. \nEvento comunitario gratuito. Indícanos quién asistirá a continuación.\nFree community event. Please let us know who will be attending below. \nPLEASE MAKE YOUR RESERVATION HERE!
URL:https://nhccnm.org/event/film-screening-el-jugador-de-ajedrez-the-chess-player/
LOCATION:Roy E. Disney Center for Performing Arts: Bank of America Theatre\, 1701 4th Street SW\, Albuquerque\, NM\, 87102
CATEGORIES:Film,Performing Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://nhccnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/The-Chess-Player-graphic.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260503
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260504
DTSTAMP:20260403T155156
CREATED:20260331T231734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260331T232109Z
UID:25781-1777766400-1777852799@nhccnm.org
SUMMARY:Film Documentary: First We Bombed New Mexico
DESCRIPTION:Sunday\, May 3\, 2026\n12:00 pm \nNHCC | Bank of America Theatre \nNHCC presents a series of documentaries about environmental hardships from the Southwest throughout Latin America. These matinee film screenings pair perfectly with a visit to the Visual Arts Museum before or after. Explore the subject matter of environmental justice through multiple mediums in one afternoon. \nIn First We Bombed New Mexico\, Tina Cordova leads the fight for justice for majority Indigenous and Latino Nuevomexicano communities in New Mexico. Locals have suffered for decades as a result of radiation produced by the world’s first atomic attack at Trinity. \nDirector: Lois Lipman | Writers: Lois Lipman\, Joel Marcus | 2023 | 1h 35m | Stars: Kate Brown\, Tina Cordova\, & Myrriah Gómez \nRESERVE YOUR TICKETS HERE! \nFree Community Event
URL:https://nhccnm.org/event/film-documentary-first-we-bombed-new-mexico/
LOCATION:Roy E. Disney Center for Performing Arts: Bank of America Theatre\, 1701 4th Street SW\, Albuquerque\, NM\, 87102
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://nhccnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/First_We_Bombed_NM-Poster.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260607
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260608
DTSTAMP:20260403T155156
CREATED:20260331T232316Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260331T232316Z
UID:25786-1780790400-1780876799@nhccnm.org
SUMMARY:Film Documentary: Water for Life
DESCRIPTION:Sunday\, June 7\, 2026\n12:00 pm \nNHCC | Bank of America Theatre \nNHCC presents a series of documentaries about environmental hardships from the Southwest throughout Latin America. These matinee film screenings pair perfectly with a visit to the Visual Arts Museum before or after. Explore the subject matter of environmental justice through multiple mediums in one afternoon. \nWater For Life follows three Latin American Indigenous community leaders as they face death threats and murder to save their precious water resources from mining\, industrial agriculture\, and hydroelectric projects. \nDirector: Will Parrinello | Writer: Sarah Kass | 2023 | 1h 31m | Stars: Diego Luna\, Lila Downs\, & Daniela Millaleo \nFree Community Event \nRESERVE YOUR TICKET HERE!
URL:https://nhccnm.org/event/film-documentary-water-for-life/
LOCATION:Roy E. Disney Center for Performing Arts: Bank of America Theatre\, 1701 4th Street SW\, Albuquerque\, NM\, 87102
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://nhccnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/water-for-life-poster.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260802
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260803
DTSTAMP:20260403T155156
CREATED:20260331T232707Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260331T232707Z
UID:25789-1785628800-1785715199@nhccnm.org
SUMMARY:Film Documentary: Green is the New Red (De la guerre froide à la guerre verte)
DESCRIPTION:Sunday\, August 2\, 2026\n12:00 pm \nNHCC | Bank of America Theatre \nNHCC presents a series of documentaries about environmental hardships from the Southwest throughout Latin America. These matinee film screenings pair perfectly with a visit to the Visual Arts Museum before or after. Explore the subject matter of environmental justice through multiple mediums in one afternoon. \nThrough a critical recounting of Operation Condor\, a coordinated campaign of political repression across Latin America during the 1970s\, filmmaker Anna Recalde Miranda locates the roots of Paraguay’s current ecological disaster. As part of this campaign\, the country’s right-wing dictatorship subjected political dissidents— leftists\, intellectuals\, union leaders\, peasants\, even children—to surveillance\, torture\, kidnappings\, assassinations and land grabs. Evidence of these unlawful actions can be found within documents in the Archives of Terror but can also be witnessed across the nation’s vast fields of soy\, which are sprayed with agrochemicals and grown in the interest of multinational food corporations. In possession of its own form of record keeping\, the soil tells a story of decimated insect populations\, worsening droughts\, displaced Indigenous peoples and landless farmers. A documentary that unites land sovereignty with human rights in chilling\, uncompromising fashion\, DE LA GUERRE FROIDE À LA GUERRE VERTE reveals the historical conditions that have allowed the political and economic priorities of few to take place over sustaining forms of life for all. (Winnie Wang) \nDirector: Anna Recalde Miranda | 2024 | 1h 45m \nFree Community Event \nRESERVE YOUR TICKETS HERE!
URL:https://nhccnm.org/event/film-documentary-green-is-the-new-red-de-la-guerre-froide-a-la-guerre-verte/
LOCATION:NM
CATEGORIES:Film
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://nhccnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Green-is-the-New-Red-poster.jpg
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