"Supporting Families with Children Adopted from China"

Long Wait for Home & Peer in the Distance

A movie screening with Director Dr. Changfu Chang

November 16th, 2008
1:30 - 5:00
Columbus Mennonite Church - 35 Oakland Park Avenue,
Columbus, Ohio 43214-4146
          
Sign in will begin at 1:30 pm, the first film begins promptly at 2:00pm.
Light refreshments will be served

Please Note: This is an adults only event.

$10 per person for current COFCC members
$15 per person if not a current member

COFCC Members - CLICK HERE TO RESERVE YOUR TICKETS

Non-COFCC Members -CLICK HERE TO RESERVE YOUR TICKETS

Pay at-the-door is $20 per person.

Babysitting is provided for children 3 years old and up ($15)
Questions?  Please contact Fil at S1F2J3@columbus.rr.com


LONG WAIT FOR HOME (running time 60 minutes)

International adoption has increasingly become a national phenomenon in the United States. Despite a surge in media coverage of  adoptions fromChina, there are many unanswered questions: Who are the birth parents and under what circumstances do they decide to give away their babies? How do children end up in orphanages and what kinds of lives do they live there? Moreover, with so many “foreigners” going to China to pick up these Chinese babies, what do the average Chinese people feel and think about  Americans and international adoption?

To answer these questions, Dr. Changfu Chang presents this widely anticipated documentary, a work of five dedicated years,  Long Wait For Home. For the first time, we sit face to face with birth parents who share with us the hard decisions they have made and the emotional toll they have suffered; we go to orphanages and take an intimate look at the living conditions of children  usually inaccessible to film crews; we also converse with a wide range of ordinary Chinese citizens and scholars on the subject of  international adoption.

Immediately following the screening of  “Long Wait For Home” will be a discussion with filmmaker, Dr. Changfu Chang.  

Afterwards,  we will take a quick break and then watch Dr. Chang's second film “Peer in the Distance”.

PEER IN THE DISTANCE (running time 30 minutes)

Wan Wan lives in the city. As the only child of the family, she seems to have everything: a good school, extra-curricular activities, and a mother who stays home just to take care of her. Xing Ping lives in the countryside. She seems to have nothing: disheartening obstacles unimaginable for her age; she must walk several hours through the mountains to her school. On her own,  she raises ducklings to pay for her tuition and she worries about whether she can continue her basic 9-year education. Wan Wan and Xing Ping live in two different worlds. But in certain ways, their lives are similar: both girls chase their childhood dreams in the shadow of social realities and expectations. Shot in two locations, the bustling city and the serene countryside, with stunning  photography and inspiring music, Peer in the Distance takes you to the worlds of two Chinese families, and to the heart of today’s China.


You can also find an article about Dr. Chang’s work in Adoptive Families magazine.    Link below:
http://www.adoptivefamilies.com/articles.php?aid=1799