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US Mall 1 - Weapons of the Spirit

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List Price: $39.95
Our Price: $39.75
Your Save: $ 0.20 ( 1% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Starring: Joseph Atlas, René Bousquet, Adolphe Caritey, Roger Darcissac, Charles Gibert Directed By: Pierre Sauvage
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: VHS Tape EAN: 9780967651200 Format: Color ISBN: 0967651204 Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 115 Theatrical Release Date: 1989-09-01
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Inspiring story Comment: Weapons of the Spirit is the story of a small French town that saved at least 3000 Jews during the Second World War. Their history as a Heugenot (Protestant) community that had endured centuries of persecution and their reverence for the people of the Old Testament (the Jews) combined with their strong sense of justice made them just naturally protect the most vulnerable at great risk to themselves. The video asks relevant questions for today. Who will stand up for the most vulnerable today? What makes one group put themselves on the line for those that do not belong to 'their people' and what makes other groups take the easy way of going along with authority even when the authority is wrong?
Customer Rating:      Summary: Unforgettable Comment: Weapons of the Spirit
I searched for several years to find this film. It is powerful, memorable, an inspiration. It has impacted my life.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A soul-stirring film Comment: Weapons of the Spirit is one of the most touching, enlightening and disturbing films I've seen in many years. The villagers of Le Chambon, mostly poor, Protestant farmers and small shopkeepers, sheltered thousands of Jews during the nightmare of the Holocaust. For these simple people the choice was obvious, and not to help their brothers in need was unthinkable. The interviews are touching, direct, and often quite funny.
I have shown this film and taught it many times. It never fails to bring tears to the eyes of the audience, and to convince them that humans, all too obviously capable of great evil, are also capable of good.
Customer Rating:      Summary: "the stories of the righteous are ... cornerstones to the future." Comment: In 1984, when Pierre Sauvage was in post-production on "Weapons of the Spirit," as he is now on "And Crown Thy Good," he wrote an article for MOMENT magazine in which he explains his motivation for speading the stories of righteous Gentiles. In so doing, he replies to the comment: "There were so few of them." "As if we even knew the numbers in this largely uncharted chapter of our past," Sauvage writes. "As if we didn't believe, we Jews especially, that even tiny minorities may own important, perhaps even divine truths.
"The late pastor of Le Chambon lived his life, his eloquent pacifist's life, as a demonstration of Christian faith. Yet in his unpublished memoirs, he confided that his faith was, ultimately, in the possibility of good on earth, 'without which,' he added, 'the theoretical existence of God doesn't interest me.'
"And I, the father of David, who want to believe in that possibility too, who want to extend it and pass both the belief and the evidence for it on to my child and to his, am bound to seek out and to treasure and to learn from the bits and pieces I can find even in the moral rubble of these times - especially in the moral rubble of these times.
"That is why, as I tell David of these things, as he learns that there is in all of us a great capacity for evil and an even greater and more insidious capacity for apathy, I want him to learn that the stories of the righteous are not footnotes to the past but cornerstones to the future. I owe my life to the good people of Le Chambon. I owe even more than that to my son."
Customer Rating:      Summary: Fair and Moving Documentary Comment: Sauvage does a great job of portaying the folk of Le Chambon in their magnificent modesty. He allows the characters to speak at length and refrains from melodrama for the most part. He demonstates the awesome potential of good-doing in the midst of extreme cruelty, even if he plays down the Christ-centered source of the Protestant's compassion.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Inspiring story Comment: Weapons of the Spirit is the story of a small French town that saved at least 3000 Jews during the Second World War. Their history as a Heugenot (Protestant) community that had endured centuries of persecution and their reverence for the people of the Old Testament (the Jews) combined with their strong sense of justice made them just naturally protect the most vulnerable at great risk to themselves. The video asks relevant questions for today. Who will stand up for the most vulnerable today? What makes one group put themselves on the line for those that do not belong to 'their people' and what makes other groups take the easy way of going along with authority even when the authority is wrong?
Customer Rating:      Summary: Unforgettable Comment: Weapons of the Spirit
I searched for several years to find this film. It is powerful, memorable, an inspiration. It has impacted my life.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A soul-stirring film Comment: Weapons of the Spirit is one of the most touching, enlightening and disturbing films I've seen in many years. The villagers of Le Chambon, mostly poor, Protestant farmers and small shopkeepers, sheltered thousands of Jews during the nightmare of the Holocaust. For these simple people the choice was obvious, and not to help their brothers in need was unthinkable. The interviews are touching, direct, and often quite funny.
I have shown this film and taught it many times. It never fails to bring tears to the eyes of the audience, and to convince them that humans, all too obviously capable of great evil, are also capable of good.
Customer Rating:      Summary: "the stories of the righteous are ... cornerstones to the future." Comment: In 1984, when Pierre Sauvage was in post-production on "Weapons of the Spirit," as he is now on "And Crown Thy Good," he wrote an article for MOMENT magazine in which he explains his motivation for speading the stories of righteous Gentiles. In so doing, he replies to the comment: "There were so few of them." "As if we even knew the numbers in this largely uncharted chapter of our past," Sauvage writes. "As if we didn't believe, we Jews especially, that even tiny minorities may own important, perhaps even divine truths.
"The late pastor of Le Chambon lived his life, his eloquent pacifist's life, as a demonstration of Christian faith. Yet in his unpublished memoirs, he confided that his faith was, ultimately, in the possibility of good on earth, 'without which,' he added, 'the theoretical existence of God doesn't interest me.'
"And I, the father of David, who want to believe in that possibility too, who want to extend it and pass both the belief and the evidence for it on to my child and to his, am bound to seek out and to treasure and to learn from the bits and pieces I can find even in the moral rubble of these times - especially in the moral rubble of these times.
"That is why, as I tell David of these things, as he learns that there is in all of us a great capacity for evil and an even greater and more insidious capacity for apathy, I want him to learn that the stories of the righteous are not footnotes to the past but cornerstones to the future. I owe my life to the good people of Le Chambon. I owe even more than that to my son."
Customer Rating:      Summary: Fair and Moving Documentary Comment: Sauvage does a great job of portaying the folk of Le Chambon in their magnificent modesty. He allows the characters to speak at length and refrains from melodrama for the most part. He demonstates the awesome potential of good-doing in the midst of extreme cruelty, even if he plays down the Christ-centered source of the Protestant's compassion.
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