Duhozanye

Duhozanye: A Rwandan Village of Widows is a feature Norwegian documentary film for television from 2011 by director Karoline Frogner.[1]

Duhozanye
Directed byKaroline Frogner
Country of originNorway
Release
Original release
  • 2011 (2011)

Norway's previous minister of justice, Knut Storberget, referred to Duhozanye in his latest book: "a film about a community of widows in Rwanda, an insightful and intense depiction of these widows."[2]

Summary

The Kinyarwanda word duhozanye means "let us console one another".[3] Frogner's film documents the development of the Duhozanye Association founded by Daphrose Mukarutamu, a Tutsi who lost her husband and nine of her eleven children to the Rwandan genocide. The community was at first a group of neighbours who buried the dead and cared for twenty orphans, but grew to a network of some 4000 widows, both Hutus and Tutsis, who cared for each other and for the orphans of the genocide, running courses, starting businesses and participating in national reconciliation.[1][4]

Screenings

  • Shown on Norwegian public broadcasting channel, NRK2, 24 May 2011 [5]
  • Memorium Nürnberger Prozesse, Cineroom, Bärenschanzstr. 72, 90429 Nürnberg, 10 April 2014
  • The House of Literature Oslo, April 2014

References

  1. Duhozanye: A Rwandan Village of Widows: A film by Karoline Frogner. Women Make Movies. Accessed June 2014.
  2. Storberget K. (2012) Det er dine øyne jeg ser, om forbrytelse straff og forsoning
  3. Madeleine Kuhns (10 April 2014). At "Duhozanye" survivors ask for dialogue on aging in post-genocide Rwanda Archived 14 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine. MediaGlobal News. Accessed June 2014.
  4. Gender Perspectives On International Development Archived 9 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Resource Bulletin. ed. PhD. Ferguson, Anne. Volume 27: Number 3. (2013: Center for Gender in Global Context).
  5. The broadcasting information on NRK's Norwegian website. NRK. Accessed June 2014.
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