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Cut From Different Cloth: Burqas & Belief

Printed From: IslamiCity.org
Category: Reviews - Media
Forum Name: Radio, TV & Film
Forum Description: Radio, TV & Film
URL: https://www.islamicity.org/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=4182
Printed Date: 20 April 2024 at 1:33am
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Topic: Cut From Different Cloth: Burqas & Belief
Posted By: Angela
Subject: Cut From Different Cloth: Burqas & Belief
Date Posted: 30 March 2006 at 7:53am

I watched this last night, the website for the group is http://www.reddoorvideo.com - www.reddoorvideo.com and the filmmaker is a woman.  It was interesting to watch.  Although the filmmaker and her daughter did not know much about Islam, it was apparent neither did most of the people they interviewed.  With a 90% Illiteracy rate, most Afganis have never read the Quran themselves.  I'm interested to know if any of you have seen this video and comment on it.

Cut From Different Cloth: Burqas & Beliefs

In 2005 filmmakers Cliff Orloff and Olga Shalygin returned to Afghanistan's northern city of Mazar-I-Sharif for the third time since the fall of the Taliban in 2002.

Despite a growing network of Afghan friends and colleagues from their two prior visits, they had been restricted in their ability to meet freely with Afghan women.

The all-covering burqa, the high-walled living compounds and cultural restrictions on women limited their access. Olga, a Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist, was puzzled why virtually all the Afghan women she saw still wore the burqa...even though security had greatly improved and a new constitution was adopted that granted women equal rights with men.

Through Serena, a 27-year-old American woman, who is living with an Afghan family and their 27-year-old daughter Hasina, we are taken inside the walls that separate women from men. Serena becomes the eyes and ears of the filmmakers.

Together, Serena, Hasina and Olga set out on a journey to learn what it means to be a woman in today's Afghanistan. As their journey progresses, Serena's desire to respect Afghan culture and tradition comes into conflict with her belief in universal rights for women. From interviewing child brides to women in prison, Serena comes to understand the risks Hasina and other Afghan women take to assert their rights.



Director:
Cliff Orloff and Olga Shalygin



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