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Chapter 20: Documentary & Human Rights: Story, Evidence, and Advocacy

Chapter 20: Documentary & Human Rights: Story, Evidence, and Advocacy

Companion Website by: Claire Gegenheimer

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

CHAPTER SUMMARY:

This chapter is a compelling examination of how documentary media serves as a powerful tool for human rights advocacy, historical memory, and community resilience. It bridges storytelling, activism, and legal accountability, showing how narratives not only inform but mobilize. By engaging filmmakers, activists, and educators, the chapter emphasizes how multimodal storytelling—across film, digital media, and participatory methods—can catalyze systemic change, amplify marginalized voices, and contribute to justice efforts.

MORE ABOUT THE PARTICIPANTS:

Pamela Yates is an award-winning documentary filmmaker and human rights activist, celebrated for her films on social justice in Latin America. Her landmark film When the Mountains Tremble (1983) won the Special Jury Award at the Sundance Film Festival, while Granito: How to Nail a Dictator (2011) was used as key evidence in the historic genocide trial of Guatemalan dictator Efraín Ríos Montt. Yates is the co-founder and Creative Director of Skylight, a nonprofit media organization that produces documentaries and digital tools to advance human rights and justice worldwide.

Paco de Onís is a documentary film producer and human rights advocate known for his powerful storytelling on social justice issues in Latin America. As Executive Director and Executive Producer of Skylight, de Onís has produced award-winning documentaries including State of Fear: The Truth About Terrorism—recipient of the 2006 Overseas Press Club Award for Best Reporting on Latin America. His other acclaimed works include Granito: How to Nail a Dictator, 500 Years, Rebel Citizen, Disruption, and The Reckoning. Through Skylight’s initiatives like SolidariLabs, he builds global networks of filmmakers, artists, and activists, using media as a catalyst for human rights and social change.

Palika Makam is a media activist and digital strategist committed to advancing racial, immigrant, and criminal justice through storytelling. As the former U.S. Program Coordinator at WITNESS, she led the Eyes on ICE initiative, equipping immigrant communities with tools to document abuses by ICE and Border Patrol for advocacy and legal defense. From Ferguson to Palestine, Makam has trained communities around the world to harness video and storytelling as powerful tools against police brutality and for the defense of human rights

Brenda Manuelito is a cultural anthropologist, educator, and media producer dedicated to Indigenous storytelling, healing, and community empowerment. She is the co-founder and Education Director of nDigiDreams, a woman-owned, Indigenous-focused consulting and training company specializing in digital storytelling to promote health, education, policy, and cultural preservation.

Dr. Carmella Rodriguez is a media producer, instructional designer, and educator dedicated to empowering Indigenous communities through digital storytelling. As co-founder of nDigiDreams, she has co-created over 1,500 digital stories across the United States, collaborating with more than 80 tribes to promote healing, cultural preservation, and social justice.

ORGANIZATIONS FROM THE CHAPTER:

Skylight Pictures

When the Mountains Tremble (1983): This documentary explores the political and social unrest in Guatemala during the early 1980s, focusing on the Indigenous Maya people’s struggle against military oppression. It features firsthand accounts of government violence and resistance, narrated by Nobel Peace Prize winner Rigoberta Menchú. The film powerfully highlights the role of U.S. intervention and the fight for human rights in Latin America.

Granito: How to Nail a Dictator (2011): A sequel of sorts to When the Mountains Tremble, Granito shows how archival footage from that earlier film became key evidence in building a genocide case against former Guatemalan dictator Efraín Ríos Montt. The documentary follows human rights activists, lawyers, and filmmakers as they seek justice decades later.

500 Years (2017): This film documents the historic trial of Ríos Montt for genocide, the growing power of Guatemala’s Indigenous population, and the 2015 popular uprising that ousted President Otto Pérez Molina. Through the lens of Indigenous resistance, it traces how collective action challenged a corrupt political system.

WITNESS Media Lab

nDigiDreams

Notable projects:

  • Sowing the Seeds of Recovery: uses storytelling in behavioral health contexts to support substance use recovery and domestic violence prevention. These stories are not only therapeutic for the individuals involved but are also shared in community screenings, policy discussions, and training sessions, reinforcing their role in collective healing and systemic change.
  • Native Elder Storytelling Project: made in collaboration with the National Indian Council on Aging, this initiative highlights elders’ experiences with federal programs like Social Security and healthcare.
  • In total, nDigiDreams has an online archive comprised of over 1,500 digital stories.

SUGGESTED RESOURCES:

Films- Tigger Warning. These films contain graphic and upsetting material. Please practice self-care while watching. 

Websites

Articles

Literature

ADDITIONAL REFLECTION:

Chapter 20: Documentary & Human Rights: Story, Evidence, And Advocacy
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