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RUNNING RED LIGHTS
By Matthew Scott Kelemen, AlterNet,
March 11, 2005
The children featured in Born into Brothels are growing up fast.
Filmmakers Zana Briski and Ross Kauffman hope to give them some tools
to navigate with.
Was anybody expecting Million Dollar Baby to sweep the Academy Awards?
Once Clint Eastwood's euthanasia drama won Oscars for Best Picture, Best
Director, Best Actress and Best Supporting Actor, a consensus began to
emerge in the media that Academy voters went sentimental this year. It
was even suggested in some quarters that said sentimental streak extended
to the Best Documentary category.
But anyone who actually saw Born Into Brothels, from the inaugural audience
at Sundance to the critics screening it for this week's wide theatrical
release, knows that there is little mushiness in the film.
"I don't think it is a sentimental film at all," says filmmaker
Zana Briski. "I think it's a really honest film about these kids
in the red-light district, and it shows everything from their joy and
humor and beauty to the really harsh reality of their lives. I would not
describe the film as sentimental, although I would describe it as a love
story. I think it really is filled with love."
Despite Briski's insistence, the film is touching when not heart-wrenching
in its depiction of the Calcutta children's plight. Co-directed by Briski
and Ross Kauffman, Born Into Brothels captures her determination to save
the kids by first inspiring them creatively, and then figuring out how
to get them educations.
"It was an incredible experience," says Briski. "This
whole project has really been all about empowering children through photography,
and that's why I started a foundation called Kids With Cameras. I didn't
know what I was doing when I started this. I was just responding to the
kids around me, and they were very curious about my camera. It's really
turned into something else, which is amazing."
Making a film, much less winning an Academy Award for it, was not on
the photographer's mind when she made her first trip east. "I went
to India in '95 to photograph different women's issues and whatever I
found," she says. Briski documented problems of infanticide and selective
abortion, "And then in '97 I went to Calcutta because I had photographs
in a show. The next day someone took me to the red-light district. Prostitution
wasn't anything I had planned to photograph. Even that part of it was
a real surprise."
Then Briski discovered the children, who were fascinated by her camera.
Avijit, Gour, Kochi, Manik, Puja, Shanti, Suchitra and Tapasi (there was
a ninth child who was not present during much of the filming) became her
focus, her proteges, and then her crusade. "I was really just responding
to people asking me for help." She says. "It was quite simple:
'Take my child, take them somewhere safe.' It was the women and the chilldren.
I just went around asking people. That's when I found out that nobody
really wants to empower these kids. Or these women."
"Zana Auntie," as she was known to the children, was strongly
affected by their impending fate. Ranging from ages 8 to 12 when she met
them, their options were few. The three boys, with their adult personalities
already emerging, were heading for a life that gave them the option of
becoming pimps, thieves, drug dealers and users, and sellers of illegal
alcohol.
The girls, however, wrestled with the knowledge that they soon would
be "on the line" – start prostituting themselves. Some
reveal that they are already feeling pressure from the prostitutes, or
even their relatives. They live in the same rooms in which their mothers
conduct business. Life is cheap, money talks, filth is everywhere, and
profanity prevails.
Briski started teaching the kids photography at the tail end of one of
her trips. She bought cameras in the States, and returned to Calcutta
in 2000 with renewed determination.
She also brought a video camera and began to film. Had she not contacted
Kauffman, though, Briski would have been unable to play her crucial role
in front of the camera. "He was my boyfriend at the time," she
says. "He loved film. He also loves kids. He was editing, and he
really didn't want to edit even though he's great at it. It was a very
intimate situation he came into, as I had spent year building trust with
these kids."
"I remember getting there," recalls Kauffman. "Going to
the hotel, Zana opening the door and saying 'We're leaving in 20 minutes.'
I was like, 'OK.' I didn't think I was going to shoot that day, but I
brought the video camera just in case.
"And of course, I got there and all I did was shoot. I met the kids,
and they immediately took me in. I had a great time, and I actually have
a photo of me, Puja and Kochi from that first day. And then Avijit invited
us over for lunch in his room in the brothel. His grandmother made us
lunch. It was a lovely day."
Kauffman shot expressive night scenes on digital video, which were used
in the film's haunting establishing shots. The luminescence of the red
lights create a mood of quiet, urban desperation and moody melancholia,
into which Kauffman weaved close-ups of the children's eyes: this is what
they see. Five years from now, if nothing was done, the girls would be
on the streets.
"We knew that going into it," he says. "They knew where
they were headed, too. When Zana was teaching the kids, it was very clear.
It wasn't like she went in there to save kids. And she didn't end up saving
them, she ended up helping them help themselves. This was never planned
out."
Briski tried hard to get the kids into schools. As children of prostitutes
and criminals, they were essentially untouchable. Kauffman's camera follows
her as her attempts are rejected, and as she battles the bureaucracy in
order to provide the proper credentials and paperwork that will get them
accepted into school. We see the kids' exhilaration when they take a field
trip to a beach. We cannot help but feel their bashful pride as they are
shown a front-page story about them in a newspaper, or when they see the
prints that will be shown at the first of what will be many exhibitions
of their photographs.
We also witness a lot of profanity-laced, verbal confrontations between
the women of the brothels. It's shocking, and then funny, when Kauffman
brings up the fact that he didn't understand the language. "It was
almost easier because in a way, they start screaming and yelling –
and that happens all the time, by the way, that's not an unusual occurrence
– and as it's going on, I know they're screaming and yelling but
I don't know what they're saying. In a way it's almost easier because
I'm filming the emotion of this scene, not the action itself."
What the film doesn't capture fully is the aftermath. Since being showcased
at Sundance in 2004, Briski has parlayed the attention that the film received
into a non-stop publicity and fundraising campaign. Kids with Cameras
is now a full-fledged organization, with workshops planned for the children
of Jerusalem, Haiti, and Cairo. Briski and Kauffman have been zig-zagging
about the country, organizing and presenting fundraising exhibitions and
screenings. "We're planning to build a school in Calcutta specifically
for children of prostitutes," she says. "It will be a high-powered
school of leadership and the arts. The kids are already helping me find
other kids that want to be enrolled. Some of them are the siblings of
the kids in the film."
The two plan to head back to Calcutta in April to look for land for the
school, and Briski says that Cameron Sinclair, founder of Architecture
for Humanity, has agreed to design the building pro bono. Her pet project,
however, is to produce a book featuring the children's work. "I'm
going to do it myself. ... I want to do a real high-quality book. I'm
looking for somewhere in the world that still does photogravures [a technique
involving chemicals and engraved plates], and I'm not having much luck.
It's a particular printing process that I think doesn't exist anymore.
I think the last printer just closed down in Japan. I'm still holding
out for that printing press because it's very, very beautiful. It's very
rich. It's a very beautiful way of printing."
The book would build on the attention that the film has brought to these
children. What winning an Oscar has done for the children is inestimable
in terms of drawing publicity to Kids With Cameras, and the pay-it-forward
effects of proactive, creative approaches to solving the problems of poverty.
The children in Born Into Brothels are caught in a cycle that they could
not escape because there was no opportunity for empowerment until Briski
conceived of and provided one. There are many Zana Aunties in the world,
unsung but providing the vehicles to escape that cycle.
For all of them, the scene in which Avijit cheerfully admonishes the
driver of the cab that will take him out of the brothels to the airport
for a conference in Amsterdam – and his future as a photographer
– is universally symbolic.
"Please drive slowly," he says. "I won't get there if
there's an accident. I won't fulfill my dreams."
The Kids with Cameras web site features information on Briski's projects,
as well as details on the film.
Matt Kelemen is Assistant A&E Editor/Film Editor at Las Vegas CityLife.
© 2005 Independent Media Institute | Alter Net
http://www.alternet.org/movies/21470/
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