AUSTIN, Texas (PRWEB)
March 04, 2016
Today America
gets its first lesson in the Gülen charter schools scandal with the
first trailer, website, and theatrical NYC premiere announced for
KILLING ED—a new documentary film from Visual Truth Projects and
award-winning director Mark S. Hall that uncovers a shocking fact: that
over 150 publicly funded, privately owned charter schools in America are
in fact a “Trojan horse” introducing a variety of abuses. Hall, who
previously directed SUSHI: THE GLOBAL CATCH (2012), uses KILLING ED to
expose the largest charter school network in the country—the Gülen
Movement—which receives over $500,000,000 a year directly from American
taxpayers.
The forthcoming documentary exposes how the
group has gained political power and financial reward in the USA through
a lack of transparency and regulation in the ever-growing charter
school movement that has become a part of America’s education system. A
two-minute trailer for KILLING ED—released broadly today—juxtaposes
interviews with education advocates and Gülen school teachers against
footage of Bill Gates, Lieutenant Governor of Texas Dan Patrick, Dr.
Diane Ravitch (Research Professor of Education at NYU), and others with
scenes of conflict in Turkey— unraveling a sophisticated business front
which presents itself as a benevolent enterprise and discounts any
criticism as “Islamophobic”. But the trailer tells a different story,
taking a turn at :45, when Noel Hammatt, a former board member of the
East Baton Rouge school district, says “I’ve never known a school to be
raided by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. This is a first.”
Hall remarks, “People deserve to know the
truth. I went in without a specific viewpoint, independent and without
affiliation to any foundation, party or group, so that the truth could
be told in a pure form.” He continues, “My hope is that KILLING ED will
enlighten a nation with a shocking first-hand look inside these
troubled, publicly funded institutions. In doing so, the film reveals
the motivations of the leader at the helm—and all those in the film that
seek to protect us from the unchecked infiltration of our children,
politicians, tax coffers, and communities.”
A Shocking Realization
What started as due diligence for a non-profit ended up being a
five-year trek to uncover the “worst case scenario” of the privatization
of education, which has emerged as a result of the often misunderstood
charter school model. Director/Producer Mark S. Hall visited 24 charter
schools around the US (19 of which were Gülen-affiliated). He conducted
44 interviews with politicians, experts, parents, teachers, charter
advocates, Turkish-Americans and Turkish journalists. Ultimately, he
interviewed former followers of Gülen to discover the origin of the
“Gülen Movement” and discovering, shockingly, the apparent destination
of many millions of American tax dollars annually.
Originally, charter schools were intended to
educate students who were having difficulty learning and had dropped out
of traditional public schools. Freedom from many of the regulations
required for public schools was given to those who wanted to develop new
ways of teaching within the public education system. However, a lack of
oversight and regulation, generally, has led to the “worst case
scenario” of a little-known but rapidly growing Islamic movement using
public funds for anti-democratic activities such as purchasing
influence, oppression of female teachers, as well as gender pay and
religious discrimination and - as the film outlines - the apparent
funneling of these public school dollars for its startling political
objectives in the nation of Turkey.
Screenings
KILLING ED will have its premiere in New York City at the Cinema
Village (Cinema Village, 22 East 12th Street, New York, NY 10003) March
25 – 31, 2016. Other screenings are in the works across the country and
individuals and groups can book a screening for their community or
organization via the Tugg.com platform. Digital/DVD/BluRay release dates
will be announced in March.
Factoids about Gülen Schools
- 60,000+ students
- 150+ schools in U.S. (with 12 new schools applied for)
- Over 1,200 schools worldwide
- $500M+ in taxpayer-funded revenue each year
- FBI investigations in four states
- Congressional investigation into Gülen-paid Turkey trips for politicians
- Over 5,000 Turkish employees on H1-B visas
- Operated by followers of Turkish Islamic cleric, Fethullah Gülen
- Gülen Movement named a ‘terrorist organization’ by Turkish government
- Movement’s charters support other follower's businesses (catering, buses, construction, school furniture, curriculum, etc.)
About Mark S. Hall
Mark S Hall is a risk-taking documentary filmmaker and lawyer based
in Austin, Texas —whose curiosity and unusual set of skills drive him to
tell complex stories for the public good. The award-winning producer
and director of SUSHI: THE GLOBAL CATCH (2012), Hall is now taking on a
much bigger fish: the growing Islamic movement of imam Fethullah Gülen.
It was as an impartial citizen that he stumbled upon a troubling story
while volunteering at a nonprofit—due diligence led him to his next big
catch. His new feature-length documentary film KILLING ED discusses the
corruption and corrosive influence of a little-known, global Islamic
group based in Pennsylvania known as the Gülen Movement that operates
one of the largest network of taxpayer-funded charter schools in the
U.S. that are the worst-case-scenario—schools with questionable
academic, labor, and H1-B visa standards.
Hall’s previous documentary feature, SUSHI:
THE GLOBAL CATCH, premiered in June 2011 at the Seattle International
Film Festival where it won a Special Jury Prize. SUSHI examines the
traditions, global growth and potential consequences of what a cuisine
in a rapidly globalizing world. The film has screened in theaters,
television and at prominent festivals in over 40 countries worldwide. It
received a major market theatrical release in August, 2012 through the
New York distributor, Kino Lorber, Inc. Hall’s television-focused work
includes MISSION ON SEVEN (2010), a half-hour documentary exploring the
film archive at the Harry Ransom Center, which won a Platinum Award at
the Houston Worldfest Film Festival in 2010. He lives in Austin, Texas.
No comments:
Post a Comment