Blood Diamond Worksheet
(Please put all of your answers on a separate sheet, do not write on this question sheet)
Sierra Leone, 1999
Civil War rages for control of the diamond fields
Thousands have died and millions have become refugees
None of whom has ever seen a diamond(Blood Diamond, Opening Credits)
Main Characters: Danny Archer, Solomon Vandy, Maddy Bowen, Dia Vandy, Colonel Coetzee
Section A
Answer ALL of the following questions
- Early in the film we see rebels coming into a village, killing the locals and burning their homes. If you knew that you had to leave your home RIGHT NOW, and you had no time to get into your car, what would you carry with you (what possession is most precious to you, what would be most beneficial)?
- Why did the rebels choose to chop off the hands of the local villagers?
Use the following information to answer question 3 - 4
- In Africa, we see them in the diamond mines, in the hands of rebel soldiers and the sheep of smugglers.
- In India, we see them in jewelry factories.
- In Europe, we see them in the hands of a diamond merchant and in a jewelry store window.
- How does each new location change the symbolism or the meaning of the diamond?
- What might be going through Solomon’s mind when he sees the diamond necklace in the London jewelry store window?
- Why are these diamonds often called “blood diamonds”?
- Events in the movie
Copy down the chart on your answer sheet.
Economic Globalization / Political Globalization / Social GlobalizationUse the following list of events to fill in the chart. Put each event in the category that you think best fits. There should be at least 2 events in each category.
- G8 meeting to discuss the sale of diamonds
- Archer smuggles diamonds to London
- London keeps the diamonds in a vault to keep the supply low and the price high
- The UN running the refugee camps
- Journalists reporting the events to western nations like Canada
- Foreign armies invading the rebel camps to help the government fight the RUF
- Major nations of the world sign the Kimberly Process to limit the sale of conflict diamonds
- Journalists go to the local bars to drink and dance with the locals
Section B
Choose ONE of the following categories and answer the questions in that section.
The following categories include quotes that can help you to answer the questions.
1. Resources creating conflicts
- “Throughout the history of Africa, whenever a substance of value is found the locals die in great numbers and in misery. This was true of ivory, rubber, gold and oil. It is now true of diamonds” (member of the G8 summit)
- “The natural resources of a country are the sovereign property of its people. They are not ours to steal or exploit in the name of our comfort, our corporations, or our consumerism. The Third World is not a world apart.” (Speaker at the Kimberly summit)
- “The Belgians [European colonists] were the first to chop off hands. King Leopold took one hand for every hundredth slave in the Congo to keep them in line.” (Benjamin – man who runs the orphanage)
- “He’s crazy for diamonds.” … “Let’s hope they don’t find oil.” (Solomon and the old man in the village)
- Archer’s trail of blood diamonds: Sierra Leone – Monrovia, Liberia – Antwerp, Belgium – India - London
- Explain what is done with the diamonds in each of these locations.
- Why does the competition for resources create violent conflicts?
According to the movie:
- The United States is responsible for 2/3 of all diamond purchases worldwide. (Canada has similar spending habits.)
- Conflict diamonds are only a small percentage of overall sales (15%); diamond sales are an important part of the economy in nations around the world
- Answer the following questions relating to the sale of blood diamonds:
- What is the government’s responsibility?
- What is the responsibility of private industry (the diamond firms)?
- What is the consumer’s responsibility?
- What is YOUR responsibility?
2. The Role of the Media
- When the journalists come across a massacre, they jump out of the van to photograph the event.
- “You sell blood diamonds too. Who do you think buys the stones that I bring out? Dreamy American girls who want…a big shiny rock like the ones in the advertisements of your magazine.” (Archer to Maddy)
- “This is what a million people looks like. At the moment, the second largest refugee camp in Africa. You might catch a minute of this on CNN, somewhere between Sports and Weather.” (Maddy)
- “It’s like one of those infomercials. You know, the little black babies with swollen bellies and flies in their eyes. So here I’ve got dead mothers, I’ve got severed limbs, but it’s nothing new. And it might be enough to make some people cry if they read it, maybe even write a check, but it’s not going to be enough to make it stop.” (Maddy)
- “People back home wouldn’t buy a ring if they knew it cost someone else their hand.” (Maddy)
- When meeting a local Shona tribe that is protecting themselves from the RUF, Maddy calms them down by taking their picture. Why do you think they wanted their picture taken by a Western journalist?
- Why is “BBC World”, a British company, broadcasting in Sierra Leone?
- How does this related to social globalization?
- What is the role of the media – to inform the public by recording what is happening, or to get involved and stop the fighting?
- How could getting involved help or hurt the situation or their ability to do their job?
- Use this information to create the following chart. You should have at least four points for each side.
Benefits of having the media in war-torn areas / Negative aspects of having the media in war-torn areas
3. Refugees
- “Maybe [Solomon’s] baby dies in that camp. Maybe his daughter gets raped. Maybe both.” (Archer)
- There are several scenes in the movie that show the thousands of people fleeing to refugee camps.
- Why did the refugees sometimes have to travel at night and hide during the day?
- Why do the workers in these camps wear blue hats, what organization does the color represent?
- Why were the refugees “locked in”.
- How would you feel if you were looking for your family and had to read these long lists of names? Would you give up hope or would you keep trying to find them?
- Using the information you have learned, create a personal response from the perspective of a refugee. This could be a letter to a friend, or a cartoon, or a story. Make sure there is enough detail to show your audience you understand what life is like for a refugee.
4. Child Soldiers
- “The government tells you the future is in your hands. We now the future, R.U.F. the future. No more hands, no more voting” (RUF leader)
- Orphanage set up to help work with the children who are now physically, mentally and emotionally scarred from what they have seen and done.
- “Sierra Leone is at peace. There are still 200,000 child soldiers in Africa.”
- List at least three ways that the adult rebels brainwash the children into becoming soldiers.
- How does Dia react when his father comes to take him from the diamond mining camp? What needed to be done to help Dia learn to love his father again?
- What punishment should be given to the men who recruit child soldiers? Be realistic in your punishment.
- Write an official proclamation, or a letter to the government, outlining what punishments will be given to those who recruit and train child soldiers. Be specific to show that you understand the issues relating to child soldiers in Africa.
5. Legacy of historical globalization: the relationship between blacks and whites in Africa
- “It seems the rebels have taken back the diamond fields, Danny. The government of Sierra Leone has contracted us to go in there and take the rebels down.” “So you sell the rebels the weapons and the government hires you when they use them. Nice, sir.” (conversation between the Colonel and Archer)
- “The Shona say it’s red from all the blood that’s been spilt fighting over the land.” (Colonel talking about the red earth)
- “Time to get your family out.” “This my country, man. We here long before you came, long after you gone.” (Archer and M’Ed)
- “Need some of the old discipline, huh.” “My boy”; “master”; references to baboon tracking and comparing it to black people. (Archer and Solomon)
- “How can my own people do this to each other? I know good people who say there is something wrong with us inside our black skin. That we were better off when the white man ruled. But my son is good. … When peace comes, this place will be a paradise.” (Solomon)
- How does the relationship between Solomon and Archer change from the beginning of the movie to the end?
- What events from the past could lead Archer to assume that he can take the role of master?
- How should we respond to the legacy that has been created by historical globalization?
Section CBONUS – these assignments are for students who would like to go further, they are not required
Choice One – the History of Rhodesia
In the film Archer says he’s from Rhodesia, and Maddy replies “We say Zimbabwe now, don’t we?”
- Find information on why the country was named Rhodesia
- Find information on why the name of the country is now Zimbabwe
- What events were occurring in the area during the late 1970s that could help explain why Archer’s parents were so brutally murdered?
- Explain the current status of Zimbabwe
Choice Two – Apartheid in South Africa
Archer talks about being a soldier in South Africa. He explains to Solomon that he fought side by side with black people, “there’s no apartheid in a fox hole.”
- What was apartheid in South Africa?
- How long did it last?
- What is the “Truth and Reconciliation” process going on in South Africa that Archer mentions?
Choice Three – Diamonds
Print out the lyrics to the following songs and attach them to your answer sheet
"Diamonds Are A Girl's Best Friend" from Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
“Diamonds Are Forever" by Shirley Bassey
“Shine On 'Em" by Nas
“Diamonds From Sierra Leone Remix" by Kanye West
Find the slogans from at least two diamond companies, like DeBeers.
- What are these songs telling you about the value of diamonds in our society?
- What do diamonds symbolize in our society?
- Debate the following question: Is a diamond really a girl’s best friend?
Choice Four - Violence
A constant debate circulates around the representation of violence in movies, games and television shows. Agencies classify them to protect young people from their influences. Advocacy groups seek to eliminate or restrict their exposure. Yet the context of the violence influences the ways that people understand its meaning. A major concern involves ‘gratuitous violence,’ or violence that seems to have little or no relevance to a story and is included just to shock or entertain the audience. Some violent representations might incite further violence, while other representations might discourage it.
Blood Diamond includes the explicit depiction of amputations, bombings, beatings, bludgeonings, and shootings. People are made homeless, prisoners and slaves. People swear, using five of the major English curses, frequently.
- Should the movie be restricted, or is its message important for all to see?
- Could the story have been told successfully if the violence were not explicit, but implied? Is its violence likely to incite or discourage violent responses?
If a single piece of work was capable of bringing about immediate change, then so many well intentioned films over the years would have long ago solved the world’s problems. But raising consciousness is a distance event, not a sprint. It’s important to remember that 150 years ago in this country it was entirely acceptable for a man to own another man. Twenty years ago people thought nothing of drinking and driving. Five years ago you could smoke in restaurants and on airplanes. These are remarkable paradigm shifts, but they only came about by a number of people willing to hold up a mirror, unflattering at times, in order to show the world to itself…. And change happens.
EDWARD ZWICK (Director of Blood Diamond)
“In many instances, resource extraction itself causes conflict. Around the world, the operations of oil, mining, and logging companies are causing severe tensions with local populations, often indigenous communities. …Typically, these operations confiscate land from local people without proper compensation. They cause an array of environmental problems by poisoning drinking water, destroying arable land, clearcutting forests, and despoiling hunting and fishing grounds… [Meanwhile] the economic benefits from resource extraction mostly accrue to outsiders: the central government, multinational corporations, and assorted foreign investors.” (Michael Renner. The Anatomy of Resource Wars.)
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