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CSR interviews CHILDREN OF WAR filmmaker and producer Bryan Single

Children of War is a documentary produced by Bryan Single and follows the healing process for former LRA child soldiers at the Rachele Rehabilitation Centre in Northern Uganda. Mr. Single spoke with CSR’s Kate Davey about rehabilitation through children creatively expressing themselves, their healing process, and his opinion on what the future holds for such former child soldiers.

The Trailer

The Interview

How did you become involved with this subject and what made you interested in documenting the rehabilitation process of former child soldiers?

In early 2006, I met an English journalist who had been in Northern Uganda doing a photo essay and he had spent some of his time at the Rachele Rehabilitation Centre.   He turned me onto the center and started telling me about it and ultimately put me in hand with its founder, Els De Temmerman. I started a dialogue with her and it became apparent fairly quickly that there wasn’t a lot of mainstream media focusing on this subject and that there was a real need to tell the story. The locals on the ground wanted their stories told and they wanted the world to hear what was going on. Els basically invited me to come; she said “Please come. The doors are wide open. I’ll help you out. And bring your film camera.”

It was just the right time in my life. However, I wasn’t really interested in just telling a another story of war and tragedy in Africa. What really interested me was her description of their process of healing for these kids at this rehabilitation center, which is essentially rooted in creative expression – meaning dancing, drawing, painting, singing, parliamentary style debate, and role playing.   That’s what really interested me – the creative expression and all the range of emotions. And of course, truth telling is an important part – one-on-one counseling and getting the personal narratives of the kids, clarifying them and then learning from those experiences and getting some perspective.

All of this was really fascinating and I realized it would be a really interesting story to tell. It wasn’t rooted in just suffering, but rooted in something more universal: this idea that everyone at one time in their life has emotional pain that they have to work through and understand. I felt this was an important and thematically universal story that anyone could connect with. 

You filmed about 80 children and of those, three of these children become the focus of your documentary.  Was that on purpose, or did it happen organically? Can you describe that process?

It did happen organically. I didn’t choose them per se.  The center has files on all the kids that they begin to take down as the kids get their story out. All of [the children's] stories are unique, but they also have witnessed and experienced very similar stuff.  I started spending a lot of time with the counselors and they basically made me an honorary staff member there. They really afforded me a lot of trust and access. Every day there was a staff meeting for an hour and everybody would discuss what was going on and sometimes their kids’ stories or situations came up, so I got a clearer idea. I was also hanging out with the kids a lot, eating with them or joking and playing and so forth – getting them used to me to the extent that I was no longer even there at some point. I got to know many of them despite many not speaking any English. It was a real intuitive process.  I just began filming a lot of stuff – a lot of interactions and counseling sessions and so forth. It wasn’t until later, however, when I got the footage transcribed, that I actually discovered what was being said. So my work process was a combination of intuition, skill and luck – being in the right place at the right time, capturing a really interesting interaction or debate and sensing that something interesting or important or dramatic is being said or expressed.  And then following that intuition with a certain child and spending more time with them based on a gut feeling that they are expressing themselves in a more articulate way than the other kids.

In one scene in the documentary, the former chief priest from the LRA comes to ask for forgiveness from the children. I am curious how the children reacted to him.  Also, in the clip, he’s specifically asking where his “wife” is in the center – a child that was given to him while he was in the LRA.  Did he actually consider this young girl to be his wife and how did she react to him?

The reason he came to the center was that like a lot of other former commanders, he was captured and given amnesty by the government. His intention in visiting the center was basically reconciliation. Some of the commanders or leaders who indoctrinate these kids now are returning to visit the kids and if they are sincere, honest, and remorseful, can play an important role in helping to de-indoctrinate the kids to the extent that it can be a very helpful process for everyone. So that was the reason that the former LRA head catechist was introduced to come and talk to the kids at the center.  I don’t want to give the film away, but there ends up being an incredibly heart-wrenching interaction between him and the children.  And yes, one of the girls I focus on in the film was given to him as a “wife” when she was 11 years old. She spent five years with him and was present at the center when he came, and their confrontation was dramatic to say the least.  Whether or not it was the right thing for him to come back and make himself visible in her life again is certainly debatable, but basically his visit for better or worse happened and provoked her to reach a point of catharsis, through tears in her case. Until that point she had really been repressing her feelings about it all, so perhaps in the long run it will help facilitate her healing.

It brings up a lot of interesting questions. About justice. About forgiveness. About the best way to achieve external and internal peace in the aftermath of war and emotional trauma.  The film asks a lot more questions than it answers, and I hope viewers will explore these questions and universal themes that the children are working through in relationship to their own experiences – their own personal relationships, personal trauma and sufferings, their own feelings about forgiveness and hope.  

What happens to former child soldiers that aren’t old enough to care for themselves, but don’t have a family return to. Is there a time limit on how long children can stay at the center?

I would say ninety-nine percent of them have another place to go, if their parents aren’t there.  They generally always have extended family they can stay with. In Northern Uganda, it’s very family oriented society­­. Family is incredibly important. It’s not that easy always though. It can bring tension because of the poverty and because of another mouth to feed, but generally very few become complete orphans. 

There are cases in which the child might be returning to an area in which he or she committed an act of violence.  Considering the stigma of being a former child soldier, are any of the kids afraid of returning to their communities and are there any community programs to help the community accept the children back as they come?

I would say yes to all of your questions.  The counselors try to prepare them [the former child soldiers] for what they will face at home before they return home. So that’s one thing not to paint a rosy picture of home as this idealized place. They recognize the challenges they may face, including their social stigmas. And sometimes the kids are afraid and hesitant. They are not sure how they will be received, and also they are still sometimes working with feelings of guilt for what they’ve done.

There is a social stigma sometimes. I’ve found that other people have done studies on this by going in there [Uganda]in the past few years and interviewing the kids, their families and the social leaders. The results of one particular study I read found that most of the kids don’t suffer – that they’re resilient, they’re accepted, and so forth.  I would say that in my opinion it’s too early to really know what the long-term effects of a 22 year war are, and it’s premature to think the short-term resilience is long standing.

I believe that trauma within the society is still really deep – not only affecting the kids – and until now, since 2006, the people are just getting out of shock mode and of living in absolute fear.  The first instinct is to unite, to forgive and to do anything to get the war away from them and to re-instill some sense of peace and stability. And that’s all beautiful and great and I’ve certainly witnessed incredible accounts in that respect, but I still think it’s too early to make any kind of judgment on what the emotional consequences and stability of this all is. It will be interesting as time goes on, when these kids grow up and become adults, how they move on with their lives.   I think it has a lot to do with their support system. If their support system is filled with love and encouragement and also opportunity through education, which is crucial, then we may see some really positive results where these kids – former child soldiers – are growing into wonderful, beautiful human beings. So we’ll just see what happens.

What is your hope for your documentary and what do you hope people take away from it?

I hope it gives people perspective on their own lives, and their own feelings and emotions, and how they might engage with their own emotions. At the end of the day even though these kids have experienced extreme situations, the root of the feelings they confront at the rehabilitation centre – fear, guilt, mistrust – these are pretty universal emotions.  Everybody can relate to these emotions on some level and can either be consumed by them or somehow find a way to delicately acknowledge what the basis of those emotions are, and deal with them and dissolve them.  I hope people that see the film will be inspired by the process of witnessing these kids go through this process, and self-reflect.

Then on a practical level, it would be great if people felt an expanded sense of compassion to the extent that they want to give back, be generous, help this particular community and these kids out.  To provide more opportunities for them through education, which is what I am interested in promoting the film. That’s my hope.

For more information on Children of War please visit the website: www.childrenofwarfilm.com and their Facebook page.

Filed under: Media/TV/Films, Uganda , , , , , ,

New film “No More Tears” confronts issue of child soldier reintegration

Discover the Journey, a team of journalists and story-tellers who “expose injustices facing children in-crisis and advocate for intervention partners” has recently released a teaser for their new film “No More Tears”.

Lindsay Branham from Discover the Journey remarks on the film:

No More Tears is a film about child soldiers and their journey to become peacemakers in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The film follows Heretier – a former violent child soldier who was given the chance of a new way of life after being given a scholarship to a rehabilitation center, and his decision to search for his best friend Moisha who he fought side by side with in the rebel group called the Mayi-Mayi. During Heritier’s search for Moisha, he becomes a peacemaker, shedding his former identity as a tool of war, and calling his friend to a life of peace instead of death. This story is human and heroic, and will inspire people to enter their own journey of becoming peacemakers, even in the face of injustice.

Filed under: Congo, Media/TV/Films , , , ,

CSR interviews playwright Sean Christopher Lewis

Child Soldier Relief’s Kate Davey caught up with playwright Sean Christopher Lewis in New York City this week about his new play The Aperture.
sean
Kate Davey (KD): One of the things that I was interested to know was what intrigued you about this topic and what inspired you to write about this?

Sean Christopher Lewis (SCL): Basically, I started writing it right around the time that Dave Eggers’s book came out, “What Is the What” and at the same time Ishmael Beah’s book had just come out and Decent Donation had come out and there had been a big article in The New York Times about it.

It just seemed that suddenly that there was a rush of materials and specifically artistic materials about the subject matter.  I just thought there was something interesting and fascinating about that part of it—about not only our attraction to tragedy and to genocide, our obvious human interest in it, but then the marketing and merchandising of that. Like the necessity of it becoming art, but also what does that mean or entail in a larger scope? What happens when it starts really becoming a massive marketed thing?
 
KD: The photographer [in The Aperture] is interested in supporting the greater good and she thinks she’s doing that [even though she’s hurting the former child soldier she is photographing] so how do you think that everything that you just spoke about–Hollywood’s interpretation of child soldiers–impacts the greater good? Or do you think it does?

SCL: It’s such a massive topic and so incredibly important. And just child soldiers in general, I think when you talk about it people assume or go towards Africa when they think of child soldiers, but it’s such a more prevalent problem than that. I mean it’s huge in Africa, but it’s not isolated to Africa.

I think it’s something that really does need exposure and consistent exposure because I think we’re in such a stimulus-based culture it’s really easy to forget about things. So I think the exposure level is really great.

I think sometimes what I get worried about or frustrated with … is as a consuming public we like things to be wrapped up. You know when we go to a movie we want it to end in a way we feel fulfilled … The problem is this is a story that doesn’t have an ending right now and it’s really difficult and hard. What I worry about if you make the art about such a topic easy to deal with and easy to digest then I feel like it doesn’t actually end up doing what I think the imagine the artists are hoping it to do, which is to, I think, create some level of action and or understanding about the problem … Great art can really activate people to make change, but it’s hard to make great art.

KD:  Is that why you set up the play the way you did? Not in chronological order?

SCL: It jumps around a good amount … Part of it was that … it was so hard for me to understand and I find for audiences to understand at times because we don’t have the same connection of what’s going on in Africa. It’s hard for us to understand the extent to how violent and insane the action is there of people being taken at night and the night commuting of children going across towns just trying to find some rest. And the idea of children running around with machine guns and rocket launchers—this is insane–in the United States this is crazy. So part of it jumping around was putting people in the situation where they could see how we don’t fully understand it because it’s absurd here. The idea of some kids running around Baltimore with rocket launcher and taking over buses and becoming a real threat to a city or state government is not a possibility here … I wanted to make something that you watched and experienced, but you experienced not by being told this is what’s going on over there … I wanted people to see it happen.

KD: What is your ideal hope for your plays? Greater activism in child soldiers? Greater awareness?

SCL: I think the awareness leads to the activism … the conversations we’ve been having with the audience after the play have been great … It’s hard to watch horrible things happen to people that you don’t think deserve it, but that’s what’s happening.  What I’ve been wrestling with is getting it to the audiences. It’s a hard sell … what I’ve been doing is trying to connect with groups like Child Soldier Relief to try to move the play even out of the theaters to get them to audiences that will interact … I want conversations to happen.

Filed under: Educational, Media/TV/Films , , , ,

Films and documentaries on child soldiers

The following is a compilation of films and documentaries relating to child soldiers and their stories.

‘Ezra’

A film by Nigerian-born director Newton Aduaka explores the psychological and social face of the problem, by telling the fictional story of one young victim kidnapped into a rebel force. It will screen commercially in New York for two weeks in February, and also play at Los Angeles’s Pan-African Film Festival.  From Voice of America news.

Ezra is the first film to give an African perspective on the disturbing phenomenon of abducting child soldiers into the continent’s recent civil wars. Ezra is structured around the week-long questioning of a 16 year old boy, Ezra, before a version of the Truth and Reconciliation Commissions, created in Sierra Leone in 2002 in the wake of its decade long civil war. This hearing is then inter-cut with chronological flashbacks to pivotal moments during Ezra’s ten years in the rebel faction which made him who he is.

Innocent Voices

Set in 1980′s El Salvador, where a boy’s twelfth birthday enlists him automatically in the army, Kella struggles to protect her family in the middle of a civil war. Kella’s son, Chava, spends his 11th year chasing a first love, shielding siblings from bullets, testing his mother, and taking on the role of his absent father.

Based on the true story of screenwriter Oscar Torres’s embattled childhood in 1980′s El Salvador, Innocent Voices is the poignant tale of Chava, an eleven-year-old boy. Chava suddenly becomes the “man of the house” in a time when the government’s army is forcibly recruiting twelve year olds to battle against the peasant rebels of the FMLN. It is a story of life, love, the hope of peace, and the ennobling power of the human spirit. From Amazon.com.

War Dance

War Dance follows the courageous efforts of Potango’s students as they pour their hearts into winning this year’s music competition. The war has stolen their homes, their parents and their childhood. Pontango’s refugee camp packs 60,000 people into its endless squalor.  There is no electricity, no running water, and no safe place. The bullet holes in the school walls tell the stories the children would rather forget. Two years ago the L.R.A. dragged 29 students from Potango’s schoolhouse to “join” the army.

Johnny Mad Dog

Johnny Mad Dog-Trailer - Johnny Mad Dog portrays the atrocities of an ongoing civil war in an unnamed African nation. Although challenging to the core, it’s an important work that will scorch the sensibilities of the most jaded viewer; it also raises the question, can evil be forgiven?Fifteen-year-old Johnny Mad Dog heads a platoon of soldiers who are younger than he is. They’re armed to the teeth, sport a variety of bizarre outfits (odd headgear, angel wings, a wedding dress), and have adopted names such as No Good Advice, Captain Dust to Dust, and Chicken Hair. From Sundance Film Festival website.

Returned: Child Soldiers of Nepal’s Maoist Army

The Documentary tells the personal story of Nepali boys and girls as they attempt to rebuild their lives after fighting a Maoist revolution. Through the voices of former child soldiers, the film examines why these children joined the Maoists and explores the prevention of future recruitment. The children describe their dramatic recruitment and participation in the Maoist People’s Liberation Army during the eleven-year civil war between the Maoist insurgents and the Hindu monarch of Nepal. The girls’ stories demonstrate how voluntarily joining the violent Maoist struggle became their only option to escape the gender discrimination and sexual violence of traditional Hindu culture in Nepal. With the major conflict ended and the Maoists in control of the government, these children are now discarded by the Maoist leadership and forced to return home to communities and families that want nothing to do with them. For many of the children of Nepal’s Maoist Army, the return home can be even more painful than the experience of war.

Heart of Fire

The true story of Senait Mehari, who came of age as a young girl soldier during the Eritrean civil war.  For more information.

Kassim the Dream

This is the story of World Champion Boxer, Kassim “The Dream” Ouma – born in Uganda, kidnapped by the rebel army and trained to be a child soldier at the age of 6. When the rebels took over the government, Kassim became an army soldier who was forced to commit many horrific atrocities, making him both a victim and perpetrator. He soon discovered the army’s boxing team and realized the sport was his ticket to freedom. After 12 years of warfare, Kassim defected from Africa and arrived in the United States. Homeless and culture shocked, he quickly rose through the boxing ranks and became Junior Middleweight Champion of the World.

Child Soldiers – 2002

The documentary team follows these children and films them under fire. They record the intimate stories of escapees from the rebel groups that routinely force the children into committing atrocities. They are present when these children re-unite with family and community, some undergoing a simple but emotionally charged ceremony of tribal rites and human compassion. Even back with their families, the children are not necessarily safe. They are kidnapped to be soldiers, escape, go home to their villages, only to be kidnapped again and again.

Soldier Child – 1998

A documentary filmed in Northern Uganda about a religious fanatic named Joseph Kony who abducts, then brainwashes children turning then into “child soldiers.” Since 1990, Kony has kidnapped more than 12,000 children and forced them to commit unspeakable atrocities against their families and communities. This film is about the efforts of the Ugandan people to rehabilitate these children and reintroduce them into society. Written by Alfred Yesmar

Filed under: Media/TV/Films , , ,

New play, the Aperture, explores complex issues about child soldiers

The Aperture by playwright Sean Christopher Lewis explores what happens when an American photographer stages photos of a former child soldier in Maryland woods as a child soldier.  As The Aperture website explains,

Staging photos to look like the boys native Africa, the photographer begins re-creating his history in pictorial – passing pictures off to the public as photos from war torn Uganda. As her notoriety grows, so do the boy’s memories as he retreats deeper into his past and begins to take on the role of soldier once again.  Is Alex a witness or an accessory to the events that follow?

The play, which won the Rosa Parks Playwright Award, has been showing in New York this past week and will be shown August 17 and 19 as part of the New York International Fringe Festival.

Look for Child Soldier Relief’s Kate Davey’s interview with Sean Christopher Lewis on The Aperture coming soon.

Filed under: Media/TV/Films, Uganda , , , ,

Hollywood to confront the issue of girl soldiers in Uganda with new film

Uma Thurman, star of Kill Bill and other award-winning films, will act as a schoolteacher in a film depicting the struggle of a group of girls who were abducted and forced to serve as sex slaves in Uganda in 1996.

The Hollywood beauty will star in the drama based on the 1996 incident which saw 140 schoolgirls being abducted from a boarding school in the African country by a band of armed rebels…

StolenAngels_cover

Ms. Thurman will play the part of Sister Caroline,the nun who heroically demanded the release of the children from the rebel soldiers who abducted them. 

The film will be based on the book by Kathy Cook, “Stolen Angels: The Kidnapped Girls of Uganda“.

For more information on girl soldiers, see:

 

 

Filed under: Books, Girl Soldiers, Media/TV/Films, Uganda , , , , ,

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