![]() | EyeofEagle: The whole world is reflected. Imagine a pipeline oil or gas from the med sea to India, china? There are much bigger plans here my friends! about 7 minutes ago |
![]() | robwegner: Two new posts from India. Today was Acts 29. What does that mean?entermission.typepad.com or www.robwegner.org about 15 minutes ago |
![]() | realfaith7: India Forex AKA Indiaforex - Business: India Forex or Indiaforex is a leading Forex Trading organisation in Indi.. link about 32 minutes ago |
![]() | jefoster: If Jon & Kate truly cared about their kids' welfare, they would've kicked out the cameras long ago - or never let them in to start with. #fb about 33 minutes ago |
![]() | JDMerryweather: @justinvoight anything dogfish head! India Brown, Rasion d'être, 60, 90 or 120 will work!
I'm low on Stone Smoked Porter too!
Thx!
#bootleg about 41 minutes ago |
| By Bobby Tanzilo Managing Editor E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Bobby Tanzilo |
| Published March 10, 2005 at 5:16 a.m. |
|
It seems like more than ever, documentary films are bringing the human experience to commercial theaters. The latest to hit Milwaukee screens is the Oscar-nominated "Born into Brothels: Calcutta's Red Light Kids."
The 85-minute film is set in the bustling and life-shattering red light district in the Indian city of Calcutta. Extreme poverty and unemployment mean that women are forced to sell themselves to support their families. While the men are portrayed as absent except when violent and demanding toward their wives and children, the women are shouldering the brunt of the work and the pain.
That, of course, filters down to the children, who must also work hard, even while most of the girls know, by seeing their mothers, what awaits them in a few short years.
For a small group of kids, New York photographer Zana Briski will make a difference. She has started a program to get cameras into the hands of the children of the red light district so we can see their world through their eyes.
She helps set up exhibitions of their work in New York and in India as a means for raising funds for the children to go to boarding schools. Removing them from the red light district and putting them into good schools is their only hope for salvation.
But to accomplish this, Zana Auntie, as some of the kids call her, must convince the children, their parents and the boarding schools -- only one will accept the children of prostitutes. Then she must overcome the long lines and difficult rules to secure all of the proper paperwork.
One of the children is selected to take a trip to Amsterdam to join other intelligent, talented kids from across the world, and this helps convince him that he ought to go to school.
But, Briski and her kids face almost incalculable odds. Will they be able to make it out of the red light district?
As powerful a statement as this film is on the resilience and potential of young people everywhere, it is also a testament to the ways life can gnaw away at that potential until there is no future.
And Briski's work is incredibly inspiring. Her passion for the children and their salvation drives her to devote considerable time, effort and soul to them. It's a valuable lesson for all.
Learn more about the program and the film at kids-with-cameras.org.
"Born into Brothels" opens Friday, March 11 at Landmark's Oriental Theatre.
|
Post a comment / write a review.
|
| Top Clicks | Top Searches | Most Talkbacks |
|
||||||||||||||