"Moolaadé," an exceptional film from
Senegal about women rising up against the brutal practice of female
genital mutilation, is currently playing in Chicago and other cities.
When I saw
"Moolaadé" at the
Chicago International Film Festival in October, I had the chance to
hear director Ousmane Sembene's comments after the screening
"I know in Africa there is going to be a change, and it is women who are
going to change the continent," he said. "They have not waited for my work
to start changing things."
He noted that women have had strong positions in African culture through
the continent's history. When he has visited Europe and looked at the
statues there, he says he thought, "All the monuments are to men. Where
are the women?"
Female genital mutilation still takes place in 38 of Africa's 54 nations,
according to Sembene.
"It's a practice that predates all known religions," he said. "Nobody can
tell you where it came from. ... People continue doing it underground."
© 2004 by the Underground Bee/Robert Loerzel.
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