Sneha Girap (Editor)

White and Black: Crimes of Color

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Duration
  

Language
  
Swahili

Director
  
Jean-Francois Mean

Country
  
Canada/Tanzania

White and Black: Crimes of Color movie scenes A scene from the 1915 movie The Birth of a Nation showing African American character Gus played by white actor Walter Long in blackface about to be

Release date
  
november 2010

White and Black: Crimes of Color is a Canadian documentary directed by Jean-François Méan. Broadcast throughout Tanzania in 2010, it portrays the discrimination, hardships and stigmatisation endured by persons with albinism in Tanzania.

White and Black: Crimes of Color movie scenes Murder most foul A detective took this crime scene photo in 1918 after children found the body of Gaspare Candella stuffed in a drum and dumped in a field

Its premiere in Dar es Salaam was inaugurated by Tanzania's Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda. After its broadcast, the murder rate of persons with albinism in Tanzania, which had been stable for three straight years, dramatically decreased (90%). The film became the cornerstone of Pamoko: a multimedia awareness campaign to end trade for albino body parts in Tanzania. It included notable Tanzanian artists: K-sher, Fid Q, Bi Chau and King Majuto.

White and Black: Crimes of Color movie scenes Crime scene

Synopsis

Since 2007, Tanzania a murder wave of persons with albinism has swept the country to fuel an illicit trade in their body parts. Vicky Ntetema, a BBC Swahili radio journalist decides to investigate this trade and expose the roots of the beliefs that fuel it.

She follows the fate of the survivors of the attacks: two young girls and one young boy with albinism who have narrowly escaped their murderers and have been displaced as a result. Their only refuge: a school for the blind where no one can see their lack of pigmentation.

White and Black is a militant documentary that surpassed its status an NGO film by being screened in film festivals across the world.

References

White and Black: Crimes of Color Wikipedia