Celebrities Whose Activism Actually Matters
Ben Affleck is set to appear before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee today to testify on the mass killings in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. That’s right, Batman will serve as an expert on the Congo.
But the Gigli star is actually pretty knowledgeable about the country. He founded the East Congo Initiative, an advocacy and grant-making nonprofit organization in 2010, testified before the House Foreign Affairs Africa Subcommittee in 2011 and worked on this report in 2008 for ABC’s Nightline. Affleck’s nonprofit prefers to connect donors directly with Congolese nonprofits, rather than channeling money into international NGOs, who sometimes take years for money to trickle down into action.
Affleck’s inclusion at the hearing, however, opened the actor and the Senate up to criticism, a common reaction to celebrities serving as ‘experts’ in Washington D.C. or the United Nations. On the one hand, celebrities can be used by Congress and international organizations, to draw attention to hearings in the press, as strategic leverage in the policy-development process (see Elmo testifying for music education programs in 2002). But there are also celebrities, like Affleck, who dedicate time to really learning about the cause they advocate for. Let’s take a look at a few:
1. George Clooney