God
Loves Uganda
February 11th,
2014
Library &
Archives, Main Auditorium
395 Wellington,
Ottawa
7:00 PM
Admission:
$20 ($10 students). All tickets available at the door.
God Loves Uganda explores the role of the American evangelical movement
in Uganada, where American missionaries have been credited with both
creating schools and hospitals and also promoting dangerous religious
bigotry.
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God
Loves Uganda - Official Trailer | HD
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The film follows evangelical leaders as they attempt the task of
eliminating 'sexual sin' and converting Ugandans to their brand of
fundamentalist Christianity.
As
an American-influenced bill to make homosexuality punishable by death
wins widespread support, tension in Uganda mounts and an atmosphere of
murderous hatred takes hold. The film reveals the conflicting motives
of faith and greed, ecstasy and egotism, among Ugandan ministers,
American evangelical leaders and the foot soldiers of a theology that
sees Uganda as ground zero in a battle for billions of souls.
Through verité,
interviews, and hidden camera footage - and with unprecedented access -
God Loves Uganda
takes viewers inside the evangelical movement in both the US and
Uganda.
Shocking, horrifying,
touching and enlightening, God Loves Uganda will make you question what
you thought you knew about religion.
It offers a
portrait of Lou Engle, creator of The Call, a public event that brings
tens of thousands of believers together to pray against sexual sin. It
provides a rare view of the most powerful evangelical minister in
Uganda, who lives in a mansion where he's served by a white-coated
chef. It goes into a Ugandan church where a preacher whips a
congregation into mass hysteria with anti-gay rhetoric.
God Loves Uganda
records the culture clash between enthusiastic Midwestern missionaries
and world weary Ugandans. It features a heartbreaking interview with
gay activist David Kato shortly before he was murdered. It tells the
moving story of Bishop Christopher Senyonjo, a minister excommunicated,
ostracized and literally spat on for being tolerant - and chronicles
his remarkable campaign for peace and healing in Uganda.
Shocking,
horrifying, touching and enlightening, God Loves Uganda will make you
question what you thought you knew about religion.
While
Uganda's parliament considers an anti-homosexuality bill, which would
mandate the death penalty for serial "offenders,"
Western-supported megachurches flourish in the African country. Roger Ross
Williams' incisive and absorbing documentary "God Loves
Uganda" makes a compelling case for the link between the two
situations without connecting all the dots for viewers, and without
condemning the young missionaries who flock to "the pearl of Africa"
believing they are saving souls.
Williams'
alarm is balanced by his measured observation of a group of
twentysomethings from the Kansas City-based International House of
Prayer. The Pentecostal Christian group deploys missionaries worldwide,
with a special zeal for Africa. The youthful proselytizers' sincerity
is evident, but the film emphasizes that such earnestness doesn't
preclude condescension - their encounters with locals, in which they
threaten sinners with hell, are thoroughly dispiriting.
- Sheri Linden, Los Angeles Times
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