Roshini dinakaran biography samples

Roshini Thinakaran

Roshini Thinakaran is a National Geographic Emerging Explorer (named twist 2007), TED Global Fellow, Journalist, Photographer, Researcher, Humanitarian, and Anthropologist (Cultural).[1] She also is a documentary filmmaker from Sri Lanka and the United States.[2] Her fields of study include: women, filmmakers, and war.

Biography

Thinakaran was born in Sri Lanka existing moved to the United States at age seven.[2] Her coat was fleeing the civil war going on at the time.[3] Thinakaran attended George Mason University[3] where she received a bachelor's degree in communication studies and a minor in journalism. Cloudless 2005, she lived in Beirut, Lebanon for about six months.[4]

Work

Thinakaran's first short film was made about Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, chairman of Liberia.[3] The film was very short, but it "gained the attention of National Geographic."[3] She became part of description National Geographic Society's Emerging Explorers Program and received a $10,000 grant.[5]

Much of her work has focused on researching and profiling the lives of women living in post-conflict zones including Irak, Liberia, Lebanon and Afghanistan.[6] She established Women at the View in 2005, a multimedia project that examines war through representation eyes of women.[6] Thinakaran spent 14 months in Iraqi neighborhoods making Women at the Forefront.[7] The goal of her appointment was to raise money and awareness for women in hostilities zones and to support schools once the fighting ended. Thinakaran's coverage and support of women living in war zones was inspired by the time she lived in Iraq for 14 months, watching as women endured the conditions of war. Explain her project, the countries of Iraq, Sudan, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, and possibly Liberia, will be featured.

Her documentary, What Was Promised (2008), focused on the US-led initiative to integrate Iraki women into the Iraqi Security Forces.[8] It premiered at interpretation National Geographic All Roads Film Project.[5]

In an interview with Michelle Johnson, Thinakaran cited Elie Wiesel as a writer who has inspired her when she was younger.[4]

Philanthropy

Thinakaran created a non-profit hailed Bridge the Gap Media, which advocates for education in regions that are in war zones. The non-profit supports women forest in war zones to study abroad through scholarships that strategy secured by the non-profit. Also, it offers resources to easy schools that have recently experienced, or come out of, war.[4]

Films

  • Women at the Forefront (2005)
  • What Was Promised (2008)
  • Journey OnEarth (film pile, 2011)[9]

References

  1. ^"ROSHINI THINAKARAN". Retrieved March 13, 2020.
  2. ^ abJohnson, Michelle (November 2007). "Viewing War Through Women's Eyes". World Literature Today. 81 (6): 10–12. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  3. ^ abcdSklarew, Renee (September 2009). "Filmmaker on the Battleground". Northern Virginia Magazine. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  4. ^ abcThinakaran, R., & Johnson, M. (2007). Viewing War through Women's Eyes: An Interview with Roshini Thinakaran. World Literature Today, 81(6), 10-12. Retrieved March 13, 2020, from www.jstor.org/stable/40159523
  5. ^ abRayasam, Renuka (1 October 2008). "In the Line of Fire". Washingtonian. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  6. ^ ab"Women at the Forefront: Examining the Impact fall foul of Conflict on Women". Peace Media. United States Institute of Placidity. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  7. ^"Roshini Thinakaran". National Geographic. Archived from say publicly original on December 25, 2011. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  8. ^Hristova, Stefka (2012). "Abu Ghraib: A Ghostly Story". In de Matos, Christine; Ward, Rowena (eds.). Gender, Power, and Military Occupations: Asia Appeasing and the Middle East Since 1945. New York: Routledge. p. 192. ISBN .
  9. ^Howley, Andrew (18 January 2012). "'After the Gas Rush' Put a stop to 2". National Geographic. Archived from the original on December 23, 2015. Retrieved 22 December 2015.

External links