WITNESS
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WITNESS Program
About
WITNESS is an organization that accepts grants and funding from human rights organizations in order to fund projects with cameras and other equipment that allow human rights activists to create documentaries about human rights.[1]
- "The story of WITNESS is one of both vision and evolution. It began in 1988, the year musician and activist Peter Gabriel traveled with Amnesty International’s Human Rights Now! Tour. Peter brought along a Sony Handycam, one of the first small camcorders marketed to consumers, to record the stories he heard. In 1991, a bystander captured on videotape the brutal beating of Rodney King, Jr. by Los Angeles police. The footage, flashed on TV screens around the globe, initiated an international conversation about police brutality and racial discrimination. Those images demonstrated the immense power of video to capture the world’s attention and viscerally communicate human rights abuses.
- With the momentum generated by reactions to the King video, Peter was able to realize his visionary idea of putting film at the forefront of human rights campaigns. With a one million dollar seed grant from the Reebok Human Rights Foundation and a partnership with the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights (now Human Rights First), WITNESS was born in 1992, becoming an independent nonprofit organization in 2001. WITNESS has since trained and partnered with hundreds of human rights activists to utilize video in their respective campaigns, In 2007, in recognition of the ubiquity of camera-enabled mobile phones and the potential for anyone to become a witness to abuse and atrocity, WITNESS launched the Hub, an online human rights video sharing community.
- WITNESS has a staff of 32 and a $4.9 million budget."