Guest Post: Journeys in Film
We have compiled a small collection of films for you centered around one of our favorite themes: celebrating the importance of both educators and education. These global films bring world religions to life while providing a cross-cultural perspective on learning in different contexts. We recommend these films for your classroom to promote religious literacy, cultural competency, critical thinking, empathy, and knowledge of people and environments around the world. Plus, every day is a good day to recognize the amazing contributions of teachers!
Big Sonia
Big Sonia introduces viewers to Sonia’s work as a Holocaust Educator. She speaks to students and prison inmates about her personal experience of unimaginable suffering; she is also a beacon of hope and resilience.
Journeys in Film offers a free Big Sonia Curriculum Guide with lessons designed for grades 9-12. Many educators combine Big Sonia with Night by Elie Wiesel for a film-book pairing.
Directed by Todd Soliday and Leah Warshawski in 2016, Big Sonia has a running time of 93 minutes and is geared to students in grades 7 to 12.
He Named Me Malala
He Named Me Malala documents Malala Yousafzai’s inspiring story and presents students with a dynamic, young, hijab-wearing Muslim woman, who is also an education advocate and a role model from the global South.
Journeys in Film offers a free Curriculum Guide and a free Discussion Guide to help educators use this powerful film in the classroom. Many educators pair this film with Malala’s biography I Am Malala in English Language Arts and Social Studies classes.
Directed by Davis Guggenheim in 2015, He Named Me Malala has a running time of 88 minutes and is geared to learners in grades 7-12.
The Neighborhood Storyteller
The Journeys in Film Discussion Guide for the film explores the topics of Girls and Education, as well as Reading, Literacy and Storytelling. The Guide also features questions about the connections between the film and the book Muzoon: A Syrian Refugee Speaks Out, written by Muzoon Almellehan, a young Syrian woman who became a refugee at age 14, and Wendy Pearlman.
Directed by Alejandra Alcala in 2022, The Neighborhood Storyteller has a running time of 49 minutes, making it easy to screen during classes. The film is appropriate for grades 5 and up.
Like Stars on Earth
Journeys in Film offers a Like Stars on Earth Curriculum Guide with nine classroom-ready lessons across ten subjects for grades 5-8. Lesson 7 introduces students to the Hindu festival of Diwali, putting it in the context of other world celebrations of light. The lesson also gives students the opportunity to make a diya, a simple clay lamp similar to ones used during Diwali celebrations.
Directed by Aamir Khan and Amole Gupte in 2007, Like Stars on Earth has a running time of 2h 42m. Because this is long for many educational settings, we recommend screening this film for a special schedule day or end of term celebration. Teachers may alternatively screen the film in parts over several days. It’s worth finding creative ways to incorporate the film in teaching because students truly love this joy-filled story. The film is rated PG.
Rebel Hearts
Rebel Hearts
Journeys in Film offers a Rebel Hearts Curriculum Guide for grades 9-12 which includes two lessons suitable for World Religion classes. It also features a hands-on art lesson inspired by the radical protest art of Corita Kent. (Learn more about this visual arts lesson in our article for Religion Matters: Exploring World Religions Through Art: Hands-on Activities for Students of All Ages.)
Directed by Pedro Kos in 2021, Rebel Hearts has a running time of 99 minutes and is appropriate for high school students and up.
Conclusion
These engaging films can inspire your students with a love of learning, an appreciation for the privilege of educational access, and a recognition of the transformative power of teachers. At the same time, they bring world religions alive in the classroom both by depicting vibrant, living traditions and by highlighting role models from different cultures and faiths. We hope you can put these films to good use to boost student engagement — because teachers deserve to be celebrated every day.
For additional ideas about how to incorporate films with religion-related content into your classroom, check out:
Ten Documentary Films that Celebrate Women of Faith
Countering Islamophobia Through Film: Recommendations and Resources

