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HALF THE SKY

 

 

 

Tostan - Our Programs

Film for Social Change: The Diégoune Call to Action  
   
 

In early 2008, in the heart of the Casamance (Southern Senegal), the community members of the village of Diégoune collectively decided to abandon the tradition of  Female Genital Cutting (FGC). The effort necessary to get the entire community to agree to a new social norm of not cutting, and to engage their social network in the decision to make the change sustainable, was considerable. Roughly 60 community members participated in Tostan’s  Community Empowerment Program (CEP) ; Diégoune formed its  Community Management Committee (CMC), which led active outreach to neighboring communities; and the class participants from the CEP traveled to neighboring villages where they performed awareness-raising skits, sang songs, and recited poetry all in order to share the themes and information that their community had learned. Beyond this, the CMCs from Diégoune and neighboring villages led careful organization and outreach to unite all of the communities that belonged to their social network to also  abandon FGC .

 

This effort was remarkable and inspiring. But Diégoune didn’t stop there.

 

Diégoune continued its work to actively promote and protect the human rights of women and girls. In the spring of 2008, Diégoune partnered with the organizations Tostan and Respect (Belgium) to create Walking the Path of Unity , a film about the community’s decision to abandon FGC. The film was shot in and around Diégoune from May to October 2008 and gives a voice to key players in the movement for the abandonment of FGC in this area. From the rice fields to the central square of the village to the local mosque, men and women explain with pride the reasons and events that led to the community’s decision to abandon a traditional practice that they came to understand was threatening the well-being of their children.

 

The film is unique both in that it was directed entirely by the Diégoune community members themselves and in its intended audience. While most films about traditional practices are created by outsiders to educate or inform audiences different from that of the subject of the film, Diégoune’s film was created to share with other Diola communities why Diégoune chose to abandon FGC. The film, titled Buru bújojenuma sísukas ( The Diégoune Call to Action: Walking the Path of Unity) is entirely in Diola, the language of Diégoune.
  
Walking the Path of Unity  illustrates a respectful, community-based, non-judgmental methodology. The film does not include offensive images or judgment from distant authorities, instead sharing the individual stories and perspectives of community members themselves: a mother, a father, an Imam, a teacher, a doctor, a husband. The experiences shared by these individuals are all familiar to Diola communities, creating a starting point for the dialogue and public debate necessary to bring about a large-scale, permanent change. Positive traditions and customs are highlighted and celebrated throughout the film, demonstrating that Diégoune's decision to abandon FGC was not a statement against local culture or Diola identity but a chance to affirm the values upon which that identity is built.

Community members from Diégoune sing in
celebration of human rights.
 

 
Projections in Senegal
Since May 2009, Walking the Path of Unity has been shown frequently in villages throughout the Casamance region thanks to the expert training provided by  Cinema  Numérique Ambulant   to Tostan’s staff. To break the ice, projections often begin with black and white comedy sketches by Buster Keaton.   For most viewers, the film screening is the first time they have ever seen a movie on a big screen. The comedy sketches trigger laughter from children and adults in the audience, creating a relaxed and comfortable atmosphere. This environment minimizes tension, increasing the community’s receptiveness and decreasing the tension that can arise from discussing the issue of FGC. After the comedy skits, Call to Action   opens with a deep voice well known in the Casamance: Bacary Tamba, a Diola leader who had led the Tostan program in the region.
              
 
  Tostan staff setting up projection equipment.             
At each projection, at least one person featured in the film, as well as social mobilization leaders who took part in the Tostan program, present the film and lead the audience in a group discussion after the showing. This informal dialogue helps to build consensus and encourage communities to raise issues and identify their own solutions. Like the film, the discussions that follow showings are framed by the fundamental values of people, such as health, unity, and solidarity.

 

Aruna Sane, who was part of the creation of the film, accompanies the projection team as a discussion facilitator. He  calls on Diégoune, the surrounding villages in Casamance and the world to keep up the momentum:

 

Today, we go forward! Let us promote healthy communities! We call on our brothers in Africa, Europe, and America to rally. Let's join hands for the welfare of our children!

 

Follow one of the links below to hear an account of the projection of Walking the Path of Unity in the village of Banga Diacoye in May 2009:

Download the story in English .

   

Download the story in French .


Download the story in Spanish .

   

 
Community members from Diacoye
Banga watching
Walking the Path of Unity.  
 
Calling the Diaspora

Diégoune’s vision for the reach of the film does not stop with the Diola communities in the Casamance. At the request of Diégoune’s residents, Tostan France is helping to show Walking the Path of Unity in cities and towns in Europe where Diola families are living. The goal in doing this is to enable the entire Diola community, wherever they are, to participate in the collective decision to protect the welfare of their children.

 
International Film Screenings: Cinéma Vérité and U NICEF Support Walking the Path of Unity  
Cinéma Vérité selected Walking the Path of Unity for the 2009 International Tribute in Paris and Geneva. T he film was shown during this tribute to illustrate Millennium Development Goal (MDG) number five: to improve maternal health. Cinéma Vérité calls on its donors and the general public to participate in the movement for the protection of human rights, health, and the abandonment of FGC. 
  
  In the fall of 2009, UNICEF organized the 20 th anniversary of the Convention on the Rights of the Child with an international film festival to take part in all of its committees and offices. Walking the Path of Unity was selected to be screened in several countries in Europe, Africa, and the Americas to demonstrate the strength of collective decisions for social change and the protection of the rights and health of girls.
  
  Return Diégoune’s Call!
Today, thanks to our partners, we have raised funds to project the film in 70 villages in the Casamance.
With a small donation, you can help us cover the cost of bringing the film to more communities. Just $220 ( 150 Euros) will cover the cost to project the film in a new village!

You can also help us spread the film in Europe amongst the Diola community by circulating information about the movie.

     

     



 
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