Darfur Now. Dir. Theodore Braun. By Theodore Braun. Prod. Cathy
Schulman, Don Cheadle, and Mark Jonathan Harris. Warner Independent
Pictures, 2007.
The documentary I watched was Darfur Now. It was filmed in 2007 and is meant to raise awareness about the Darfur Genocide. The conflict started in the early 1980s when drought hit the country of Sudan. At the same time, overpopulation was also becoming an issue. Resources and fertile land became a serious source of conflict as different groups of people started to compete over these resources. While the conflict started as something one can only accept as natural, the fight quickly became rigged when the Sudanese government started to favor one side over the other. The “Arab” dominated government supplied “Arab” groups to wipe out the “African” population. Soldiers riding on horseback, known as Janjaweed, began to carry out a mass execution of Darfurian villages. Today, up to 3 million Darfurians have become displaced and hundreds of thousands more killed. Roughly 8 years have passed since the official initiation of the holocaust.
The documentary I watched was Darfur Now. It was filmed in 2007 and is meant to raise awareness about the Darfur Genocide. The conflict started in the early 1980s when drought hit the country of Sudan. At the same time, overpopulation was also becoming an issue. Resources and fertile land became a serious source of conflict as different groups of people started to compete over these resources. While the conflict started as something one can only accept as natural, the fight quickly became rigged when the Sudanese government started to favor one side over the other. The “Arab” dominated government supplied “Arab” groups to wipe out the “African” population. Soldiers riding on horseback, known as Janjaweed, began to carry out a mass execution of Darfurian villages. Today, up to 3 million Darfurians have become displaced and hundreds of thousands more killed. Roughly 8 years have passed since the official initiation of the holocaust.
The filmmaker’s purpose was to draw attention to the
genocide and urge people to take action.
The filmmaker included lots of footage of travels in Darfur. There is a constant use of testimonials
throughout the video, both from victims and outside activists. Refugees can be seen carrying weapons and
machine guns, marching through the dirt in their sandals. This is meant to bring the conflict to the
viewer’s eyes, where he can see it up close and personal. The documentary has several parts. One of the parts is following activists such
as Don Cheadle and Ahmed Mahammed Abaka as they attempt to bring light to the
issue given their own unique positions.
Abaka tries to establish credibility for himself by speaking on a
similar issue in his homeland Colombia.
Although the filmmaker tries to draw empathy from its
viewers and attempts to appeal to pathos, honestly I thought he did an
extremely poor job. First of all, he
overused his testimonials. One can only
stand so much “touchy-feely” emotion in one sitting. Emotion is powerful in contrast with other
elements of argument, such as logic and reality. But the filmmaker’s use of it was especially
poor. Not only that, but the
testimonials that the filmmaker chose to use were inadequate in portraying what
truly goes on in Darfur. So not only was
I hearing the same things over and over again, but I could sense no real
seriousness, no real pain, no real intensity.
The documentary’s presentation of
Darfur seemed “fake,” and that was the sad part because it deserved to be
presented in a more honest light.
There were also many disrespectful, foolish, and ineffective
rhetorical decisions in the video. The
filmmaker used absolutely no logic in his argument. I expected some type of real moral context,
some philosophical push to aid Darfur but I received none. I merely received the same naïve, childish
excuse of “Oh genocide is bad and it is important to help people.” If the video’s purpose is to get people to
realize, and to make them take action, then that explanation is simply not enough. Having been around this issue for so long, I just
did not feel like the video did Darfur justice.
To me, it was the work of an outsider not fully committed to his
proposed mission, but rather someone who was more concerned with giving off the
impression that he cared. This goes the
same for many of the activists in the documentary. Their efforts were honestly very naïve in some
ways and disrespectful to Darfurian victims in that they did not understand the
full seriousness of the issue.
One last aspect of the documentary that was extremely
annoying to me was the music and the dialogue.
The music playing whenever Darfur victims were interviewed was jumpy
African music. I understand that this
may be a part of their culture, but to make this loud distinction really hurts
the cause. The video makes all Africans
look like they are tribal and “early humans,” like they are not fully
developed. This really upsets me because
this is a group of activists that claim they respect and care for these
victims, and yet they fail to view them as equal beings. Also, at the end of the documentary, there
was joyful hopeful music playing the background. This was very disrespectful in my eyes
because it gave off the impression that the genocide was over when in reality,
it is still taking place today. It was irresponsible
in that the filmmaker did not put in enough thought to realize what a dangerous
toll this mistake has. Because of this “hopeful”
sensation, audience members will entirely dismiss the situation as if it has
already passed, or that it is too late to help now.
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