Category Archives: a place in the city

Sunday Tribune: Pain & Courage

http://www.sundaytribune.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=5099156

Pain and courage

July 26, 2009 Edition 1

Rough Aunties and A Place in the City are two documentaries that are showing at this year’s film festival.

They are two very different films about the strength and bravery of two different groups of people, but both films take place in eThekwini, and chronicle the pain and suffering of a broken society in which the state has failed dismally to fulfil its role as protector and guardian of its citizens.

Rough Aunties, which has already received much attention for winning the World Cinema Documentary Grand Jury Prize at Sundance, tells the story of five women who work for Operation Bobbi Bear in Amanzimtoti and have dedicated their lives to helping abused and neglected children in KwaZulu-Natal.

While anyone who watches Rough Aunties will no doubt find the commitment, bravery and compassion of these women completely inspiring, they will also be disturbed by the violent and uncaring society that the film depicts.

The film’s website talks about “a nation being transformed with hope and energy into a new democracy,” and while the film certainly contains hope and energy, it never shies away from the horror and pain which, to their credit, never seems to overwhelm the so-called “rough aunties”.

Beginning with the counselling of a very young girl who has been raped, the film follows Operation Bobbi Bear and the five rough aunties: Mildred Ngcobo, Eureka Olivier, S’dudla Maphumulo, Thuli Sibaya and Jackie Branfield, who started the project.

In the 10 weeks of shooting, British documentary-maker Kim Longinetto shadows the women through their daily work.

In one of the many candid scenes in the film, the women talk among themselves about why they have become “rough”.

As well as the catalogue of rape, abuse and neglect, the women themselves are also affected by horrific events which take place in their personal lives.

While Rough Aunties ends with notes of redemption, the film offers neither salvation nor resolution. The rough aunties of Bobbi Bear are going to carry on, because that’s what they do.

A Place in the City by director Jenny Morgan documents the struggles of another group of people in Durban, the shack dwellers of Abahlali Basemjondolo.

The shack dwellers’ movement started in Durban four years ago, and now has tens of thousands of members from 30 settlements.

Although Abahlali’s central demand is for land and housing in the city, it has also fought for access to education and the provision of water, among other things.

Most middle- and working-class Durban residents interact daily with the residents of the shacklands and squatter camps. Shackland residents clean our houses, guard our cars and houses, they clean our windscreens, work in our gardens and often even go to school with our children. Yet they live in appalling conditions, usually without even the most basic infrastructure. And yet, for the most part, we do nothing.

A Place in the City talks to members of Abahlali as well as other shack dwellers, detailing their disillusionment with the government that so many of them fought for.

As a documentary, it is too short for its subject matter. It also fails to engage with those who execute eviction orders against the homeless or fire rubber bullets at them.

But, while it could have been a better film, it should nonetheless remain compulsory viewing for all of us – both in government and broader society – who ignore, or help to exacerbate the plight of the landless poor.

London Screening of ‘A Place in the City’

Jenny Morgan who made the film, will be present at the screening as well as London Umhlali Matt Birkinshaw. Firoze Manji from Pambazuka will be the chair. To see some reviews of the film, to order a copy or to see an excerpt on YouTube go to: http://abahlali.org//////node/4869

The Royal African Society and War on Want invite you to a screening of

A Place in the City

A film by Jenny Morgan

Wednesday 18 March 2009
5-7pm
Room B111
Brunei Gallery, SOAS
Thornhaugh Street,
Russell Square, London WC1H 0XG

The screening is free and open to the public

See the attached invitation for more more information

A Place in the City – short reviews

A Place in the City – short reviews

A Place in the City was filmed, produced and directed by Jenny Morgan, made with assistance from Fahamu and is distributed via JourneyMan Pictures.

The film can be purchased from Fahamu and there is a long excerpt on YouTube.

‘Compulsory viewing for government and the broader society’
— Sunday Tribune, Durban

‘The film is truly excellent, and for those of us involved daily with evictions, resistances and processes, I can tell you that it is very inspiring and well-documented. It brings to light the extraordinary capacity of simple people treated unfairly by an unjust system to keep faith in their future and their capacities and, despite their hardships, to think of a better and more humane world, not only for their neighbours or their brothers and sisters, but way beyond this. They are dreaming, and they are building a more just world, for all of us, and for our children.

‘This film, in its simplicity and respect, is an invaluable contribution for the hundreds of communities facing eviction, and to all of those who are still struggling for a better world. I hope that you can find the resources to have the voice of Abahlali heard in Spanish, Portuguese, French, Chinese and more.’

–Professor Yves Cabannes
Chair of Development Planning, University College London
Chairperson, Advisory Group on Forced Evictions to the United Nations

‘A Place in the City is an extremely important film which shows that while Apartheid maybe over in South Africa, class and housing inequalities are still very evident. In some cases the current political regime’s treatment of the so-called “slum dwellers” around Durban is worse than that experienced at the height of the Apartheid era. The resilience of people who reside in these well-established but inadequately resourced communities is remarkable, and expertly captured in the film. All those in the film speak with clarity, dignity and commitment – they hold a strong sense of hope of achieving their goals and being able to maintain their “rightful” place in the city.

‘For anyone teaching geography, global, urban or development studies, or focusing on aspects of global social justice, this is an excellent resource. It represents insight without patronising, reality without pity, and demonstrates the strength of people who materially have so little and yet can articulate powerful and accurate politics.’

–Dr Tracey Skelton
Department of Geography, National University of Singapore

‘Anyone interested in contemporary South Africa should watch this film to learn more about the plight of South African civil society for equal rights, and the inspiring work of the Abahlali movement.’

– Dr Lindiwe Dovey
Lecturer in African Film at SOAS, University of London

‘A Place in the City offers some fascinating insights into the struggle for rights in South Africa’s informal settlements today. It captures Abahlali baseMjondolo’s work in mobilising shack-dwellers through activists’ own words, and presents this through footage that sensitively explores the harsh realities of people’s everyday lives. This is a thought-provoking film that will be of interest to anyone concerned with issues around urban development and grassroots social movements in contemporary Africa.’

—Dr Glyn Williams
Department of Town and Regional Planning
University of Sheffield

‘A Place in the City is one of those rare films that is both very well produced and insightful by virtue of its clarity and dispassionate documentary style. It is no less powerful for that. Moreover, it lends itself to use in different contexts: lectures and seminars, leadership training, general awareness raising, and policy advocacy. I have been looking for just such a resource to update my South African library for several years. This film deserves the widest possible exposure.’

–Professor David Simon
Head of Department
Professor of Development Geography
Department of Geography
Royal Holloway
University of London