Film on COs wins awards and attention

December 20, 2016 | Web First
Deborah Froese | Mennonite Church Canada
Winnipeg, Man.

A film produced by the Mennonite Heritage Centre (MHC) Archives about conscientious objectors (COs) is garnering significant attention.

CBC recently aired The Last Objectors on its national channel, as well as in Manitoba. The 44-minute documentary won a Silver World Humanitarian award in Jakarta, Indonesia. It was also nominated for the Best Feature Documentary at the Views of the World Music & Film Festival in Montreal this summer. The film embodies faith, peace and service in action.

The Last Objectors includes interviews with a handful of still-living COs from the Second World War who describe the faith that drove them to refuse arms and the resistance they faced from society for their choice.

The Last Objectors acknowledges these men’s experiences as both important and valid,” says Korey Dyck, director, MHC Archives and Gallery. “For some, this is their only chance to tell their story about serving Canada in a peaceful way during the Second World War.”

Andrew Wall of Refuge 31 films directed the documentary. Wall says the project came to light through his connection with Conrad Stoesz, MHC archivist, with whom he attended Canadian Mennonite Bible College (CMBC, now Canadian Mennonite University). Stoesz is a passionate supporter of conscientious objection and the energy behind www.alternativeservice.ca, a website exploring how COs found ways to serve their country. His success in securing grants for The Last Objectors helped see the project to fruition.

The unique perspective of those who chose not to go to war captured Wall’s attention. “The COs, like the veterans of the Second World War, are fading away. Unlike the veterans, their stories haven’t been all that well recorded . . . it was a story worth telling.”

The Last Objectors is the second part of two in The CO Project. The film was produced in association with the CBC, MTS Stories from Home, and the support of Heritage Canada through the World Wars Commemoration Fund. The film has already been screened for several congregations, the Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario, and the Winkler (Man.) Senior Centre, with time included for discussion. It was also scheduled to be shown at the Canadian Museum of Human Rights in Winnipeg.

For information about scheduling group screenings of The Last Objectors, contact kdyck@mennonitechurch.ca. View a video trailer at www.commonword.ca/go/831.

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