Following their goal of raising awareness and deepening the understanding of environmental issues among Dominican audiences, GFDD and the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF) are making the film available to the public worldly, free of charge.
Following its successful screening in 13 international festivals, Garbage or Resource? A Dominican Republic Experience is now available online for free at Global Foundation for Democracy and Development’s (GFDD) Youtube Channel. The 17-minute documentary, produced by Global Foundation for Democracy and Development (GFDD) and Fundación Global Democracia y Desarrollo (Funglode), is one of its kind in its genre in the country, that shows us how recycling has become a significant economic opportunity for Dominicans. Through various business and educational projects, the viewer learns how, besides the obvious benefit to the environment, recycling brings economic development through the creation of new businesses and industries.
“It is a film that inspires, moves and calls to action,” explains the Director of GFDD and Director of the short film, Natasha Despotovic. “Now – she continues – the message is clear: trash is no longer just trash and it has a value. As long as trash can be utilized it is not trash. The proper term is waste, a resource that is raw material first and then it can be turned into a new product.”
Following their goal of raising awareness and deepening the understanding of environmental issues among Dominican audiences, GFDD and the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF) are making the film available to the public, free of charge, with a view to promoting discussion and inspiring people to action through its screening at conferences, schools, universities and communities, not only in the Dominican Republic but worldwide.
Awards
Last December, Garbage or Resource? A Dominican Republic Experience won its third international award, the Award for Best Documentary at the Miami Short Film Festival (MSFF), after receiving the Award for Best Documentary at the Green Lens Environmental Film Festival 2014, and the Second Place of the Fan Coral Award 2014 at the Reef Renaissance Film Festival. In total, this short film has participated in 13 official competitions at international film festivals around the world.
This project is part of the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF) and its Short Film Production program. This year, the fifth edition of DREFF will take place from September 8th to the 13th in 14 cities throughout the Dominican Republic.










As a result of its affiliation with the GFN, the DREFF, an initiative of the
President Fernández commented on the excellent opportunity that this agreement provides, stating that it “opens a space for the young Dominican film industry to be able to support local talent through better training.”
The idea was to visualize on site, through a field visit to La Humeadora Mountain National Park, the outcomes of linking biodiversity conservation and the local communities. In this regard, ReCrearte, through its coordinator, Bertha Santana, attended the event to share some of the experiences it fostered during the course of the four creative recycling workshops it carried out in the community of Guananito, within the area of impact of La Humeadora Mountain National Park, between November 5th and December 2nd, 2014. During these workshops, community women learned about the three golden rules, or the 3Rs, for the proper management of solid waste: reduce, reuse and recycle, and experienced firsthand how recycling waste and transforming it into art can strengthen both the individuals and their communities.
In her turn to speak Rebecca Byerly, journalist and director of the documentary film Women of the Mountain, talked about her experience as an adventure athlete and mentioned that “ultra-marathons are the most challenging task I have ever undertaken in my life”. Byerly showed still pictures of her documentary and emphasized that “as a journalist she felt compelled to document the of life fellow athletes who like her had run marathons in different ranges ofmountains around the world”.
Garbage or Resource? A Dominican Republic Experience had received more than 10 awards since its official launching at the 3rd edition of the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF). The film shows in detail how recycling has become an important economic opportunity for Dominicans. Through various business and educational projects the viewer notes that besides the obvious benefit to the environment, recycling allows economic development through the creation of new businesses and industries. An inspirational short film that moves and calls for action.
