In 2011, the prize was given to the Iranian director
Mohammad-Ali Talebi for his children's film
Bad o meh (
Wind and Fog), a powerful depiction of the effects of war – especially on children. In 2012, the award went to the documentary
Call me Kuchu, directed by
Katherine Fairfax Wright and
Malika Zouhali-Worrall. The film shows the life and struggle of
gay and lesbian activists in Uganda who worked together with human rights activist
David Kato, the first openly gay man in Uganda. In 2013, German Development Minister awarded the prize to the Palestinian actresses and the director
Udi Aloni,
Mariam Abu Khaled and
Batoul Taleb for their film
ART/Violence. They translate their mourning for the murdered Arab-Jewish founder of the Freedom Theatre, Juliano Mer-Khamis into artistic rebellion against patriarchal oppression and the Israeli occupation in their work. Another film nominated that year was ''Char - The No-Man's Island'', directed by Sourav Sarangi. In 2014 the award was given to the movie
Concerning Violence by the Swedish documentary filmmaker and TV journalist
Göran Hugo Olsson. The movie is about the African Freedom Movement in the 1960s and 1970s, and merges newly discovered archived materials on the violent confrontation with the colonial powers with quotes from Frantz Fanon's "The Wretched of the Earth", recited by Lauryn Hill. The roadshow took place on 17 September 2014 at
Kino Arsenal in Berlin, with a second event on 19 September 2014 in the Rex-Lichtspieltheater in
Bonn. There were discussions with the director and others after the screenings, and the documentary was then shown in more than 20 German cities. The
Flowers of Freedom, a film about the people of
Kyrgyzstan directed by
Mirjam Leuze, was nominated for the award in 2014. ==References==