fruits of our labor

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    420 7th

    Street SE, Washington, DC 20003Phone: (202) 986-2433 Fax: (202) 546-3749

    Email: [email protected]

    The Fruit of Our Labor: Afghan Perspectives in Film

    United States Institute of PeaceFebruary 25th, 2011

    Christopher R. Mantas

    The United States Institute of Peace (USIP) held a conference, moderated by USIPProgram Officer for Afghanistan, Barmak Pazhwak, about the ongoing mission of

    Community Supported Film (CSFilm), a documentary film organization aimed at

    influencing local and international perspectives on paths to peace, and its latest

    efforts in dissecting the impact of foreign aid on local communities in Afghanistan.

    In order to be granted increased access and illustrate local perspectives, CSFilm, led

    by documentary filmmaker Michael Sheridan, utilized an empowerment strategy

    of training local Afghans in filmmaking and storytelling to culminate in an unbridled

    depiction of challenges currently being faced on the ground. Ten locals were

    selected by three main criteria: an avid interest/background in storytelling (not

    filmmaking); an active participation in international aid issues; and relating the skills

    they will learn in this process to their own work in the future. All three main ethnic

    groups, Pashtuns, Tajiks, and Hazaras, were represented in the program. After a five

    week intensive training course, selectees chose their topics and began filming.

    Three short films were shown.

    The first film viewed at USIP was L is for Light, D is for Darkness, by Hasibullah

    Asmaty. This short film analyzed the post-Taliban environment in a local

    community, where there was no girls school in the village. A local woman named

    Wazeema, was the catalyst for change. Wazeema mobilized women in the village to

    appreciate the importance of educating their daughters and pressured men to allow

    girls their right to education. The local Mullah supported Wazeemas cause,

    preaching that every Muslim deserves an education. However, remnants of Taliban

    ideology dampen Wazeemas hopes of having all local girls attend school.

    The second film, Hands of Health, by Zahra Sadat, surveyed the effects of the

    National Solidarity Project (NSP), a community development initiative aimed at

    providing communities funding for projects they deem most vital. In the film,

    villagers who elected the construction of a maternity clinic for the village are

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    dismayed over the lack of medical equipment or doctors in the now-complete

    facility. Local women are forced to travel to Kabul for care, a long trip which

    oftentimes prevents women from receiving medical attention. The Ministry of

    Health, which pledged the Mens Development Council equipment and doctors upon

    completion of the facility, does not appear concerned.

    The last film shown at USIP was Water Ways, by Majeed Zarand. This film highlights

    the major disparity between neighboring villages, one of which has access to water

    and one which does not. Villagers in the community without water are forced to be

    day-laborers to provide food for their families, but unable to work on a solution to

    their water issues while working all day. The neighboring villagers have utilized

    funding from the NSP to improve their canal to make access to water easier. This

    dichotomy highlights the effects of natural resources and the importance of self-

    sustainability in rural communities.