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  • Arabic  (2)
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  • Arabic  (2)
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    [San Francisco, California, USA] :Kanopy Streaming,
    UID:
    (DE-602)almahu_9949609562702882
    Format: 1 online resource (1 video file, approximately 82 min.) : , digital, .flv file, sound
    Content: A Sudanese immigrant to the UK returns to her homeland to understand why the seemingly racially harmonious country of her memories has become the scene of one of the worst instances of ethnic cleansing in recent history. Director Taghreed Elsanhouri says that she made this film "out of a passionate belief that I was uniquely qualified to tell a story of race because as a northerner in Sudan I know what it is to belong to a dominant group and as a black woman in Britain living with racism I know what it must be like to live marginalized as a minority in Sudan. It is this double consciousness that informs my story." She returns to Sudan, having emigrated to Britain as a child, to see how the seemingly racially harmonious country of her memories could have become the scene of not one but two of the worst instances of ethnic cleansing in recent African history. Up until now the perilous situation in Sudan has been seen only from outside the country. All About Darfur offers an opportunity to hear it explained by eloquent, diverse even contradictory voices from within Sudan. The director talks to ordinary Sudanese in outdoor tea shops, markets, refugee camps and living rooms about how deeply rooted prejudices could suddenly burst into a wild fire of ethnic violence. She asks how only two months after peace accords were signed ending a twenty year long civil war between the Christian and animist South and an aggressive Islamic regime in the North, war broke out between the ethnic groups in the West, or Darfur, and the government in Khartoum. At an elementary school the director hears repeated the lessons she learned about Sudan's creation as a nation state. It was originally a collection of small warring fiefdoms or tribes which were only unified in 1825 by the invasion of the Ottoman Turks eager for a new source of slaves and gold. Elsanhouri's family in fact were North Africanmerchants who emigrated with the Turks and intermarried into the Arab Danagla tribe. Sudan assumed its present boundaries as the largest country in Africa when the Anglo-Egyptian Condominium took possession of it towards the end of the century. As a consequence, a unified Sudanese cultural and political identity never had a chance to emerge. One professor interviewed suggests that the Sudanese might form a multicultural state like Switzerland but there seems little possibility for such a compromise among the distrustful potential partners of such a confederation. "A sensitive and non-sensational portrayal of the war and destruction in Darfur that privileges the voice of the average Sudanese....A useful film for those interested in contemporary African politics of ethnicity and gender, civil wars and conflict resolution and development." - Salah Hassan, Cornell University "A highly personal documentary that is touching and illuminating." - Jennie Punter, Toronto Globe and Mail "A provocative and intelligent film." - Henry Sheehan, President, Los Angeles Film Critics Association "Elsanhouri seems influenced by certain Iranian filmmakers in that she modestly acknowledges the documentarian as an influential interloper...a provocative and intelligent film." - John Tobin, East Midlands Media.
    Note: Title from title frames. , Originally produced by California Newsreel in 2005. , Mode of access: World Wide Web.
    Language: Arabic
    Keywords: Documentary films.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    [San Francisco, California, USA] : Kanopy Streaming
    UID:
    (DE-627)181563071X
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file, approximately 82 min.) , digital, .flv file, sound
    Content: A Sudanese immigrant to the UK returns to her homeland to understand why the seemingly racially harmonious country of her memories has become the scene of one of the worst instances of ethnic cleansing in recent history. Director Taghreed Elsanhouri says that she made this film "out of a passionate belief that I was uniquely qualified to tell a story of race because as a northerner in Sudan I know what it is to belong to a dominant group and as a black woman in Britain living with racism I know what it must be like to live marginalized as a minority in Sudan. It is this double consciousness that informs my story." She returns to Sudan, having emigrated to Britain as a child, to see how the seemingly racially harmonious country of her memories could have become the scene of not one but two of the worst instances of ethnic cleansing in recent African history. Up until now the perilous situation in Sudan has been seen only from outside the country. All About Darfur offers an opportunity to hear it explained by eloquent, diverse even contradictory voices from within Sudan. The director talks to ordinary Sudanese in outdoor tea shops, markets, refugee camps and living rooms about how deeply rooted prejudices could suddenly burst into a wild fire of ethnic violence. She asks how only two months after peace accords were signed ending a twenty year long civil war between the Christian and animist South and an aggressive Islamic regime in the North, war broke out between the ethnic groups in the West, or Darfur, and the government in Khartoum. At an elementary school the director hears repeated the lessons she learned about Sudan's creation as a nation state. It was originally a collection of small warring fiefdoms or tribes which were only unified in 1825 by the invasion of the Ottoman Turks eager for a new source of slaves and gold. Elsanhouri's family in fact were North Africanmerchants who emigrated with the Turks and intermarried into the Arab Danagla tribe. Sudan assumed its present boundaries as the largest country in Africa when the Anglo-Egyptian Condominium took possession of it towards the end of the century. As a consequence, a unified Sudanese cultural and political identity never had a chance to emerge. One professor interviewed suggests that the Sudanese might form a multicultural state like Switzerland but there seems little possibility for such a compromise among the distrustful potential partners of such a confederation. "A sensitive and non-sensational portrayal of the war and destruction in Darfur that privileges the voice of the average Sudanese....A useful film for those interested in contemporary African politics of ethnicity and gender, civil wars and conflict resolution and development." - Salah Hassan, Cornell University "A highly personal documentary that is touching and illuminating." - Jennie Punter, Toronto Globe and Mail "A provocative and intelligent film." - Henry Sheehan, President, Los Angeles Film Critics Association "Elsanhouri seems influenced by certain Iranian filmmakers in that she modestly acknowledges the documentarian as an influential interloper...a provocative and intelligent film." - John Tobin, East Midlands Media
    Note: Title from title frames , Originally produced by California Newsreel in 2005
    Language: Arabic
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
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