God Loves Uganda

http://dbpedia.org/resource/God_Loves_Uganda an entity of type: Thing

God Loves Uganda is a 2013 American documentary film produced and directed by Roger Ross Williams, which premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. It explores connections between evangelicalism in North America and in Uganda, suggesting that the North American influence is the reason behind the controversial Uganda Anti-Homosexuality Act, which at one point raised the possibility of the death penalty for gays and lesbians. The filmmakers follow a group of young missionaries from the International House of Prayer in their first missionary effort in another nation, as well as interviewing several evangelical leaders from the US and Uganda. rdf:langString
rdf:langString God Loves Uganda
rdf:langString God Loves Uganda
rdf:langString God Loves Uganda
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rdf:langString Derek Wiesehahn
rdf:langString United States
rdf:langString Richard Hankin
rdf:langString Benjamin Gray
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Mark degli Antoni
rdf:langString Roger Ross Williams
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rdf:langString Jonathan Hall
rdf:langString Bishop Christopher Senyonjo
rdf:langString Jesse & Rachelle Digges
rdf:langString Rev. Jo Anna Watson
rdf:langString Rev. Kapya Kaoma
rdf:langString Rev. Martin Ssempa
rdf:langString Rev. Robert Kayanja
rdf:langString God Loves Uganda is a 2013 American documentary film produced and directed by Roger Ross Williams, which premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. It explores connections between evangelicalism in North America and in Uganda, suggesting that the North American influence is the reason behind the controversial Uganda Anti-Homosexuality Act, which at one point raised the possibility of the death penalty for gays and lesbians. The filmmakers follow a group of young missionaries from the International House of Prayer in their first missionary effort in another nation, as well as interviewing several evangelical leaders from the US and Uganda. Williams was inspired to make God Loves Uganda when he met David Kato, an LBGT activist who was killed in 2011, ostensibly in a robbery. Kato told there was an untold story of the damage American fundamentalist evangelicals are doing in Uganda; of the insidious nature of their aggressive effort to harvest young, unclaimed souls to preach a gospel of love intertwined with a gospel of intolerance. The Dutch premiere of the film was at the Movies that Matter Film Festival in The Netherlands in 2014.
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