EDUCATION

For classes, we're pleased to offer an engaging and affordable virtual experience featuring What You Won’t Do For Love.

The Details

Teachers and schools will be able to book in-class film streaming to continue to inspire and educate our next generation of environmentalists. For more information about booking, get in touch at education@soulpepper.ca.
A free comprehensive resource pack will be provided with your booking in order to offer additional insights and to explore the key issues raised through the film from different angles.

The resource pack features:
- Interviews with members of the creative team
- Conversation starters (both pre & post film)
- Creative classroom activities
- A Call-to-Action for Youth
- Essay questions
- Relevant Articles and Insights  for Youth Activists
- Hands-on learning activities from our partner organization
- Additional Links and Resource Lists
Teachers and schools will be able to book in-class film streaming to continue to inspire and educate our next generation of environmentalists. For more information about booking, get in touch at education@soulpepper.ca.
Testimonials

"Warm, wise and overflowing with generosity, this is a love story so epic it embraces all of creation. Yet another reminder of how blessed we are to be in the struggle with elders like David and Tara.” 
 -- Naomi Klein (author, journalist, social activist, and filmmaker) and Avi Lewis (filmmaker, climate activist, educator)

“The film did inspire me in my environmental activism. Before watching the film, I thought people like David Suzuki were extraordinary individuals, and an average person like me could never be like him.  But after watching the film, I learned David Suzuki thinks in a similar way as an average person like me, but who simply has a passion for the environment… Therefore, I felt that as long as one is motivated, it’s possible for someone like me to make the world better.”
Mao (Grade 9 Student)

"A deeply personal, totally enchanting love story. David and Tara take us on a magical journey into the heart of commitment - to one another, to family, to community, to justice and to the planet. A testament to hope.” 
Maude Barlow (author and activist, founding member of the Council of Canadians, co-founder of the Blue Planet Project)

"This film takes a more conversational approach to the climate crisis so I think it will be able to inspire students with various levels of familiarity with climate change. It makes environmental activism an accessible topic that everyone can help to solve while also providing new perspectives to those already working to fight the problem." 
Julie (Grade 12 Student)

“I was skeptical at first, wondering how in the world a film could be made resting solely on the spoken word amongst four players. But they pulled it off, often with pungent hilarity and always with scathing intellectual content.  What a triumph!“  
Stephen Lewis (Co-founder and co-director of AIDS-Free World, Companion of the Order of Canada) 

“The movie makes me want to go out and see nature's beauty in all its glory — not the magnificent and glorious like water falls and northern lights — with the patterns on trees, the shapes of clouds, the falling snow and how it sways with the wind. I want to keep them, to see them, to feel them.” 
— Steven  (Grade 9 Student)
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