We invite you to watch a film entitled “People for nature. Tales from the Białowieża Forest”. The documentary is a poetic meeting with people involved in the protection of the Białowieża Forest from the Nature and Culture House set up at an old schoolhouse in Teremiski. The film brings together the personal micro-stories of three activist women. They talk about what brought them to the Białowieża Forest and how they fell under the spell of the natural world of the forest. The heroines of the film are: writer and film screenwriter Joanna Pawluśkiewicz, educator and therapist Katarzyna Paterek and Grażyna Chyra, a tour guide around the Białowieża National Park and Białowieża Forest. They talk sensitively about activism and its hardships, values, nature education, and shared responsibility for the place where they live and work. In the film, Adam Wajrak, a journalist, will speak about the unique nature of the Białowieża Forest, which constitutes only 0.6 percent of Polish forests: “Why is this so extraordinary? Because this is the best preserved temperate lowland forest. And these were the forests that were transformed most rapidly by humans. This forest remained … and is incredible” – he argues. “My great public dream is for the Białowieża Forest to finally be permanently protected. It would be best if the entire area was protected as a national park” – he says.
#Let’s make the entire forest a National Park!
#CalaPuszczaParkiemNarodowym
Language: Polish with English subtitles
Production: Fundusz Partnerstwa
Filming and directing: Sebastian Strama, Jakub Cachro
Screenplay: Dominika Zaręba
Consultation: Anna Woźniak-Lubaś
Film editing: Przemysław Filipowicz
Cast: Grażyna Chyra, Katarzyna Paterek, Joanna Pawluśkiewicz, Adam Wajrak
Drone photos: Anna Płażewska
Color correction: Zuzanna Zamyślewska
Film editing assistant: Marcin Pikuła
A special thanks for helping in the making of the film: TROPEM WAJRAKA – Andrzej Załęski, Anna Płażewska and Lui Kwiatkowska / Porosty Foundation
English subtitles: Piotr Szmigielski
Film was created within the framework of „Reclaim Our Civic Space!”, an international project which benefits from a 1,8 million € grant from Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway through the EEA and Norway Grants Fund for Regional Cooperation.