lesson: Blood Diamond, 2006  

Plot Summary:

 In 1999, in Sierra Leone, the fisherman Solomon Vandy dreams on the day that his young son Dia Vandy will become a doctor. His dreams are shattered when the rebels invade his village and kidnap him to work in the diamond mines. Solomon finds a huge pink diamond and while hiding it, the commandant of the rebels sees, but the rebels are attacked and Salomon is arrested by the government army. While in jail, the wounded commandant tell the prisoners that Salomon found the stone, and the mercenary smuggler Danny Archer from Zimbabwe releases Salomon and proposes to exchange the diamond by his missing family. Using the idealistic American journalist Maddy Bowen, Danny locates the wife and daughters of Salomon in a refugee camp, but is informed that his son has been recruited by the rebels. Salomon and Danny consolidate a partnership, with Salomon looking for and finding his son, and Danny looking for the diamond and finding redemption. Written by Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

 

Blood Diamond Test Site
Edward Zwick Leonardo DiCaprio
Leonardo DiCaprio (left), and Djimon Hounsou in  Blood Diamond.
BloodDiamondoijads233.jpg

 

Students will analyze the movie Blood Diamond. Edward Zwick directs a film which studies the true cost of the diamond industry. Film terminology will be presented as they are demonstrated in the exhibition of the motion picture.

 

Back to Top

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Why I Didn't Buy a Diamond.

After reading two disturbing articles today in reaction to Blood Diamond I’ve decided to elaborate a bit on my own knowledge of blood diamonds as well as tell my own story and why I refuse to buy diamonds. But first the articles. Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly wrote a review of Blood Diamond whose main point of contention was that the film was a “term paper disguised as entertainment.” I know she works at Entertainment Weekly, but COME ON! I for one appreciate it when the films I go to see have a point, or speak to a larger issue in our world, or move me to change the way I live. If all we want out of movies is entertainment then we’re living in a self-imprisoned tyranny of shallow consumerism. And it’s those people that need to see movies like Blood Diamond the most!

Article two is from Parija B. Kavilanz of CNN Money.com. Parija points out that jewelers are sweating Blood Diamond because it’s the holiday season and this is when they do most of their business. The movie is “a concern” for Diamond cartels like DeBeers, etc. What makes me sick about this is it’s the movie that is the concern, not the conflict diamonds! If DeBeers had even a shred of integrity they would be pushing hard for strengthening the Kimberly process, or sending some of their billions to victims of DeBeers business partners. That and not this movie, should be thier PR concern.

Okay, so here the story of why I didn’t buy a diamond.


Reason One: Violence
My sophomore year of college a girl name Jenn Tracy sent out an email to a list I was on about blood diamonds. I was listening. I quickly found out that people in Sierra Leone were being mutilated by soldiers from a militia called the Revolutionary United Front (RUF). These militant revolutionaries were waging a war against the government of Sierra Leone as well as the civilians. They funded their violence by capturing diamond mines and enslaving locals to work in them. As a way of instilling fear in the slaves the RUF would randomly amputate the limbs of the people they captured, leaving behind tens of thousands of amputees. De Beers among other companies knew that this was happening and didn’t do anything to stop it. (Guardian Article)


Reason Two: The Deceptive and Manipulative Diamond Business
The diamond business itself became increasingly sickening to me as I began to study it more and more. Diamonds as jewelry and as an engagement ring is a relatively new thing. Diamonds are useful for ONE thing, as blades in industrial machines. In the late 1800’s when the first diamond “mines” were discovered in Africa the diamond a once rare stone was now about to boom, and diamond business was in big trouble. Prices of diamonds used as blades would drop and diamonds used as jewelry depended on the notion that they are rare (and since the 1900’s they’ve been anything but). Enter DeBeers. They invented the myth that diamonds symbolize love and launched a huge advertising blitz to move these diamonds they were raking in. A little less than a century later and Americans have bought the myth that diamonds are forever, are rare, symbolize love, are expensive, and that every engaged woman is entitled to such a stone.


It is the diamond business itself that sickens me to the point of never wanting to buy a diamond even if it was proved the diamond was clean. Even after assuring me that a child had not lost a limb for the diamond I’m looking at there would still be the incredibly evil system of the diamond industry itself that has relentlessly deceived and manipulated its customers.


(The full text of Jay Epstein’s book The Diamond Invention is avaliable online)
So when I asked Kara to marry me, I was ready with an Emerald.
More resources...
Also check out this interview with screenplay writer Charles Leavitt.
Amnesty International - Did Someone Die for That Diamond?
Amnesty International - Conflict Diamond

BloodDiamond98asf8.jpg

Back to Top