FilmAid International


FilmAid International is a non-profit humanitarian organization that uses film to educate and entertain displaced people around the world. FilmAid was founded during the Kosovo War in 1999 by producer Caroline Baron to assist with refugee communities in Macedonia suffering the effects of war, poverty, displacement and disaster.
Since 1999, FilmAid has worked in partnership with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and other global aid organizations to help bring information and training to more than two million people worldwide.
FilmAid produces and distributes community-based films on public health and safety issues such as maternal health, HIV, cholera, gender-based violence and conflict resolution.
Using inflatable screens and other ‘Mobile Cinema’ units, FilmAid screenings aims to overcome language and literacy boundaries.
FilmAid currently works in Kenya, in the large refugee camps of Dadaab and Kakuma as well as informal settlements in Nairobi and Mombassa, with Burmese refugees in Thailand and also in Haiti.
FilmAid is a global federation of nonprofit, charitable organizations. Members include FilmAid International, FilmAid Asia, FilmAid Kenya, and FilmAid U.K.

Activities

FilmAid uses film and other media to bring information to communities affected by disaster, displacement and economic disparity. FilmAid activities fall into the following categories:
Tanzania: FilmAid begins its screening and filmmaker training program in the Kibondo refugee camps for Burundian refugees, managed by UNHCR and the Tanzanian Ministry of Home Affairs. Work there continues until the closure of the camps in 2008.