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Born into
Brothels
(2004)
Director: Ross Kauffman, Zana Briski
Rating: R
Distributor:
ThinkFilm
Release Date:
12.08.04
Review
Posted:
02.25.05
By
Howard Schumann
In India, red light
districts are booming in cities like Mumbai,
Delhi,
and Calcutta where millions of transient men live and work far away
from their homes and wives. The oldest and the largest of these is
Sonagachi in Calcutta where the women have organized into a sex trade
union of more than 5,000 active workers and have spread awareness
about AIDS and HIV, making Sonagachi one of the few red light
districts in the country that does not accept clients without condoms.
Subject to a class system that puts them on the lowest rung of Indian
society, the mostly illegitimate children of the sex workers are also
expected to "join the line" when they reach a certain age. Minor girls
are the most sought after in the brothels and secure the highest
price, making it very difficult for the parents to let them leave,
especially when the only other alternative may be the starvation of
their entire family.
In 1997,
photographer Zana Briski was assigned to capture images of Sonagachi.
While the women were reluctant to let her into their lives, the
children quickly responded and Briski became a resident of the brothel
for five years. During that time, she provided the children with point
and shoot cameras, set up classes in photography, and trained them to
document the harsh reality of their daily lives. The result is the
Oscar nominated documentary Born Into Brothels, a film that
takes us inside the squalid brothels and allows us to see the world
through the eyes of some of its most vulnerable residents, five girls
and three boys, ages ten to fourteen. Shot in dazzling color using a
digital camera, we get to know the children through their photos.
There is Kochi, age
10, who is strong, resilient, tough, and sensitive. Avijit, age 12,
seems to be the most talented of the group. He draws, paints, takes
pictures and, through Briski's patient efforts, was able to
obtain a passport to be a part of a photo-editing panel in Amsterdam.
Shanti, age 11, is most eager to learn but is troubled and often feuds
with her brother Manik. The others: Gour, Puja, Tapasi, and Suchitra
all show a unique ability to find beauty in their ugly environment.
The film documents Briski's uphill efforts to place the children in
boarding schools to escape the cycle of poverty and exploitation. Some
manage to find places in the schools but the biggest obstacle is shown
to be the children's own mothers and guardians, often protective out
of the sheer necessity for survival.
Born Into Brothels
is a testimony to the transforming power of art and of one
individual's ability to make a difference. Showing the children's art
to Western audiences has helped to raise money for the Sonagachi
children's education. It may also serve to make people more aware of
the potential talent of millions of other third world children who
struggle daily for existence on the streets, the orphanages, and the
refugee camps of our teeming world.
Film
Grade: A-
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