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Stolen (2009 Australian film)

Stolen is a 2009 Australian documentary film that uncovers slavery in the Sahrawi refugee camps controlled by the Polisario Front located in Algeria and in the disputed territory of Western Sahara controlled by Morocco, written and directed by Violeta Ayala and Dan Fallshaw. It had its world premiere at the 2009 Sydney Film Festival,[1] where a controversy started after one of the participants in the documentary, Fetim, a black Sahrawi, was flown to Australia by the Polisario Liberation Front to say she wasn't a slave. The POLISARIO, avowing that it doesn’t condone slavery and needing to safeguard its image on the world stage to support its independence fight, began an international campaign against the film. It put out its own video denouncing Stolen, in which several people who Ayala and Fallshaw interviewed say they were coerced or paid by the Australian duo.[2] On May the 2nd 2007, while filming in the refugee camps Ayala and Fallshaw were detained by the Polisario Front and Minurso and the Australian ministry of foreign affairs negotiated their release. "The Polisario Front officials criticised the interest the two journalists took in black members of the Sahrawi population, Reporters Without Borders has learned. Ayala told the press freedom organisation that she saw cases of enslavement. "The fact that they are fighting for their independence does not mean that Polisario’s leaders can allow themselves to commit such human rights violations", she said. "It is our duty as journalists to denounce such practices. We originally went there to work on the problem of separated families. But during our stay, we witnessed scenes of slavery".[3]

Stolen
Promotional poster
Directed byVioleta Ayala
Dan Fallshaw
Written byVioleta Ayala and Dan Fallshaw
Produced byTom Zubrycki
Violeta Ayala
Dan Fallshaw
Deborah Dickson
CinematographyDan Fallshaw and Violeta Ayala
Edited byDan Fallshaw
Release date
  • 11 June 2009 (2009-06-11) (Sydney)
Running time
78 minutes
CountryAustralia
LanguagesSpanish, Hassaniya, English

In 2008 Human Rights Watch published a report confirming that vestiges of slavery still affects the black minority in the Polisario refugee camps and in Western Sahara, the report included a manumission document signed by the POLISARIO's Ministry of Religious and Cultural Affairs.

Stolen has screened in more than 80 film festivals worldwide including 2009 Toronto International Film Festival, IDFA, Seattle IFF, Stranger Than Fiction, Glasgow Film Festival, MIFF, One World Film Festival, Docaviv, It's All True, Singapore IFF, Cleveland IFF, Norwegian Short Film Festival, Frontline Club Liberation Season, and Amnesty International Film Festival.

Stolen television premiere on PBS World as part of the Afropop Series hosted by Academy Award nominee actress Gabourey Sidibe was initially scheduled for 5 February 2013. Due to the controversy around the film, the broadcast was pushed back. "There’s been significant pressure placed on PBS to not show "Stolen" from US-based lobbyists (US law firm Foley Hoag have been paid the best part of $1,000,000 annually by the Algerian government since 2007 to lobby in the US on issues related to Western Sahara) for the Algerian government, who back the Polisario. It was this pressure on PBS that prompted WGBH to carry out their own investigation and present the "Stolen" two-hour special".[4]

Stolen premiered nationwide on 26 February on PBS, 2013 with a special report carried by journalist Phillip Martin that included an interview led by WGBH journalist Callie Crossley with the directors, followed by a panel discussion whether slavery exists in Western Sahara with Eric Goldstein (Deputy Director, Middle East and North Africa Division Human Rights Watch), Madeline Campbell (Professor of Urban Studies, Worcester State University) and Bakary Tandia (Mauritanian Anti-Slavery Activist).[5]

Overview edit

Is it true my white grandmother beat you as a child? asks 15-year-old Leil. Her mother, Fetim, looks at her hard, still chewing her lunch. They sit at a table, a TV behind them, as well as a doorway opening onto a bright white daylight. Leil continues, "Violeta already knows", as the camera cuts to filmmaker Violeta Ayala, seated across from them. Her face turns cloudy as she listens: "You’ll be in trouble, by saying we were beaten", cautions Fetim. Again, the camera shows her instructing her daughter, "It’s always been that slaves are beaten from a young age".

The scene breaks here and the film, Stolen, has changed. Before this moment, as Ayala has narrated, the documentary was to film a UN-sponsored family reunion program between refugees and their families. Fetim had come to a refugee camp in the Algerian desert as a child some 30 years ago, leaving behind her mother Embarka and her siblings. With some 27,000 on the waiting list, the fact that Fetim and Embarka have been selected seems miraculous.

And yet: this story is now reframed, as Ayala and Fallshaw learn that their subjects are not only refugees, but also slaves. The filmmakers can't begin to imagine the complications that follow this discovery.

Their questions elicit astonishing and also cryptic stories, as Fetim and Leil, as well as Fetim's cousin Matala, sort through what is safe to tell "the foreigners".

As the film reports, the Polisario Liberation Front, a nationalist organization backed by Algeria, has been fighting with Morocco over Western Sahara for the last 34 years. Neither the Moroccan government nor the Polisario want stories about slavery documented. And yet, with at least 2 million black people living in slavery in North Africa, STOLEN insists, telling such stories is only a first step to bringing out slavery's end.

As a result of the filmmaking process whereby the Polisario and the Moroccan government attempt to confiscate and steal the tapes, STOLEN has a fragmented structure that pieces together conversations. The fragments, however, allow the black Sahrawi's stories to be heard, be it aloud or as a whisper.

Indeed, Fetim's initial revelation that she has a "white mother", Deido, surprises Ayala, who wonders how they ended "up together, with so much racism in the past?”. Deido explains, sort of. "Saharan people are not all the same...Some of them buy black people and own them, others free them, but keep them as their family. We don’t talk about this anymore".

A friend of Leil, Tizlam, is also outspoken concerning what it means to be a slave. "You’re just scratching the surface", she says, her face at once poised and fierce in dim shadows. "They come and take the children and the parents can’t say anything, they have no rights". Her grandmother concurs. "There is no law for us", Tizlam says, "What we want is for this not to exist. It should be erased, it should be from the past, not the present or the future". Ayala and Fallshaw describe their growing concern, not only for their own safety but also for "all the people who trusted us with their stories".

As the Polisario catches wind of the new topic for Ayala and Fallshaw's film, they begin to worry about their safety and those in the film. Their worries are well founded, as they are detained by the Polisario. The filmmakers bury their tapes in the desert—an apt and awful metaphor for the experiences they've heard about—and then escape to Paris, where they pursue the story, hoping to recover their material and make public what they've witnessed. A phone call with Leil reveals, however, that their own ambitions and hopes don't matter much: Leil cries, "Trying to do good, you did bad. Now the police are all over us". As Ayala ponders this notion in voiceover, that "without intending to, we got Leil and Fetim in a lot of trouble", the film structure makes clear the problem: she's in a hotel room, at a distance. None of us can know what Leil and Fetim are experiencing—off camera.

The film traces how Ayala and Fallshaw come to know the ongoing complexities of slavery. As it is denied by most North African regimes (in Mauritania, Mali, and Senegal, as well as Algeria and Morocco) and described here by Ursula Aboubacar, the Deputy Director of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees, as "a cultural issue that is existing". That is, as Aboubacar puts it, the UN can only "combat" the practice by bringing it to the attention of local police forces, the Polisario included. Ayala is horrified by the lack of power wielded by the UN, or anyone else, it seems. Indeed, as Tizlam has said, "There is no law for us".

Controversy edit

The film generated significant controversy. One of the character's in the documentary, Fetim a refugee who live in the camps, travelled from North Africa to the premiere of the documentary at the Sydney Film Festival in Australia to denounce her portrayal in the film and to say publicly that slavery doesn't exist in the refugee camps. Her trip to Australia was paid for by the Polisario Front, the organisation who controls the refugee camps.[6] The Polisario Front have strongly opposed the film and deny the existence of slavery in the camps they administer.

Some Polisario supporters have claimed the translations from the non-written dialect Hassaniya Arabic to English are inaccurate. The film has been broadcast on the US public broadcaster, PBS. While disputes over the accuracy of the Hassaniya to English translations continue, much of the discussion about slavery in the film is conducted in Spanish.

In a letter from Mr. Antonio Guterres, UN High Commissioner for Refugees, to Mr. Abdelaziz, the President of the SADR (Polisario), dated 22 June 2009, Mr. Guterres expressed "regret that in the film of Violeta Ayala and Dan Fallshaw, the comments of an official of the HCR have been presented out of their context." He went on to state: "In the complete interview, of about 90 minutes long . . . [Mrs. Aboubacar] reiterated strongly that if certain residual practices of slavery could still prevail in the subregion of West Africa, she had no knowledge of such practices in the refugee camps of Tindouf." He further commented that "[T]he HCR has established for a long time a presence in the refugee camps of Tindouf. It does not have any information that practices similar to slavery have taken place in the camps. In fact, no occurrence of this practice has been brought to the attention of the HCR . . . ." This statement is contradicted in the interview on YouTube given to the filmmakers by Mrs Aboubacar, Deputy Director at the UNHCR for the Middle East and North Africa, who clearly states the UN is aware of the practice of slavery in the refugee camps.

The Human Rights Watch report published in 2008 ("Human Rights in Western Sahara and in the Tindouf Refugee Camps") indicates evidence of slavery in the camps. The report states the following, page 150 'In Sum, credible sources testified to Human Rights Watch about vestiges of slavery that continue to affect the lives of a portion of the black minority in the Tinduf camps. The practices involve historical ties between families that involve certain rights and obligations that are not always clear. Being a slave does not necessarily preclude enjoying freedom of movement. The issue of slavery in the Tinduf camps deserves closer scrutiny than Human Rights Watch has been able to undertake. It bears mentioning that Saharawis in the Moroccan controlled Western Sahara told us that residual practices of slavery can be found there, as well.'[7] It also noted that the Polisario is on record as "firmly opposing slavery in all of its manifestations," and that it has taken steps to ensure that its officials do not carry out the practice. These comments were not mentioned in the film although a senior Polisario representative was interviewed by Violeta Ayala during the Manhasset negotiations and is seen on record in Stolen denying the existence of slavery in the Tindouf refugee camps.

In the panel discussion that followed the airing of the film Stolen by PBS World as part of the AfroPoP series, Eric Goldstein, the Deputy Director of Human Rights Watch in charge of the Middle East/North Africa desk noted that when he had brought to the attention of officials in the camp an incident in which a dark skinned woman had been denied the ability to marry, they immediately took steps to remedy the situation. He also noted that this practice was the only vestige of slavery that he had found in his investigation of the camps. Bakary Tandia, a human rights activist in the movement against slavery, originally from Mauritania, commented in the post film discussion that Stolen depicts slavery in the POLISARIO camps as it is practiced in Mauritania.

A documentary was produced by Polisario supporter and filmmaker Carlos Gonzalez[8] refuting many of the allegations in the film. It is called "Robbed of Truth" In this film Mr. Gonzales, who was a camera man who accompanied the film makers of Stolen to the Tindouf camps on their second visit before they learned about slavery. Gonzalez was introduced to the filmmakers by the Poslisario representative in Australia, Mohamed Kamal Fadel. Gonzalez revisited the camps and re-interviewed many of the participant, some of whom had been jailed by the Polisario for speaking to the filmmakers about slavery. The stories they told Mr. Gonzalez differ significantly from the accounts given to the filmmakers of Stolen.

There is also a critique of Stolen published at http://awsa.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/critique-v3-pdf.pdf. The Australian West Sahara Association (AWSA) who published the critic has been a long time supporter of the Saharawi refugee camps and the Polisario Front.

Awards edit

  • Best Feature Documentary Prize at the 2010 Pan African Film and Arts Festival, Los Angeles, USA[9]
  • Best Editing and Special Mention at its NZ premiere at the Documentary Edge Festival 2010[10]
  • Best International Feature - Rincon International FF, Puerto Rico 2010[11]
  • Silver Olive at the XV International TV Festival Bar 2010 in Montenegro[12]
  • Best Film at the 2010 Festival Internacional de Cine de Cuenca, Ecuador[13]
  • Grand Prix of The Art of Document at the 2010 Multimedia Festival the Art of the Document, Warsaw, Poland[14]
  • Best Documentary at the 2010 Africa International Film Festival, Port Harcourt, Nigeria[15]
  • Golden Oosikar for Best Documentary at the 2010 Anchorage international Film Festival, Alaska, USA[16]
  • Honorable Mention at the 2010 Ojai Film Festival, Ojai, USA[17]
  • Bronze Audience Award at the 2010 Amnesty International Film Festival, Vancouver, Canada[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Damien Murphy and Louise Schwartzkoff (12 June 2009). "I am not a slave, documentary subject tells Sydney Film Festival". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 11 June 2009.
  2. ^ Dubinsky, Zach (23 September 2009). . mediarights.org. Archived from the original on 9 March 2012. Retrieved 9 May 2009.
  3. ^ Reporters Without Borders. "IPOLISARIO FRONT BRIEFLY DETAINS TWO AUSTRALIAN FILMMAKERS AT REFUGEE CAMP/". RSF. Retrieved 9 May 2007.
  4. ^ Violeta Ayala and Dan Fallshaw. "First Person: The Stolen Filmmakers Explain How a Doc About Refugees Became a Controversial Film About Reported Slavery". indiewire.com. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  5. ^ PBS World. "WORLD Special Report: Behind Stolen/". world channel.org. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  6. ^ Fuchs, Cynthia. "'Stolen': Seeing More Possibilities". popmatters.com.au. Retrieved 4 April 2011.
  7. ^ Goldstein, Eric. "Human Rights in Western Sahara and in the Tindouf Refugee Camps". Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  8. ^ Bodey, Michael. "Saharan doco whips up a storm". Retrieved 24 June 2009.
  9. ^ . Paff.org. Archived from the original on 22 July 2010. Retrieved 5 September 2010.
  10. ^ "Documentary Edge Awards 2010| Documentary Edge Festival 2010". Docnz.org.nz. Retrieved 5 September 2010.
  11. ^ "Award Winners". Rinconfilm.com. Retrieved 5 September 2010.
  12. ^ "JURY 'S DECISION IN THE CATEGORY OF DOCUMENTARY". tvfestbar.com. Retrieved 27 October 2010.
  13. ^ "Stolen, mejor película del Festival de Cine". eltiempo.com.ec. Retrieved 27 November 2010.
  14. ^ "FESTIVAL WINNERS 2010". artofdocument.pl. Retrieved 5 December 2010.
  15. ^ . africafilmfest.com. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 6 December 2010.
  16. ^ . anchoragefilmfestival.org. Archived from the original on 20 October 2012. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
  17. ^ "Ojai Film Festival Awards the "Pope"and Craig T. Nelson". indiewire.com. Retrieved 8 November 2010.
  18. ^ "2010 Audience Award Winners!". van.amnestyfilmfest.ca. Retrieved 25 November 2010.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Stolen at IMDb

stolen, 2009, australian, film, stolen, 2009, australian, documentary, film, that, uncovers, slavery, sahrawi, refugee, camps, controlled, polisario, front, located, algeria, disputed, territory, western, sahara, controlled, morocco, written, directed, violeta. Stolen is a 2009 Australian documentary film that uncovers slavery in the Sahrawi refugee camps controlled by the Polisario Front located in Algeria and in the disputed territory of Western Sahara controlled by Morocco written and directed by Violeta Ayala and Dan Fallshaw It had its world premiere at the 2009 Sydney Film Festival 1 where a controversy started after one of the participants in the documentary Fetim a black Sahrawi was flown to Australia by the Polisario Liberation Front to say she wasn t a slave The POLISARIO avowing that it doesn t condone slavery and needing to safeguard its image on the world stage to support its independence fight began an international campaign against the film It put out its own video denouncing Stolen in which several people who Ayala and Fallshaw interviewed say they were coerced or paid by the Australian duo 2 On May the 2nd 2007 while filming in the refugee camps Ayala and Fallshaw were detained by the Polisario Front and Minurso and the Australian ministry of foreign affairs negotiated their release The Polisario Front officials criticised the interest the two journalists took in black members of the Sahrawi population Reporters Without Borders has learned Ayala told the press freedom organisation that she saw cases of enslavement The fact that they are fighting for their independence does not mean that Polisario s leaders can allow themselves to commit such human rights violations she said It is our duty as journalists to denounce such practices We originally went there to work on the problem of separated families But during our stay we witnessed scenes of slavery 3 StolenPromotional posterDirected byVioleta AyalaDan FallshawWritten byVioleta Ayala and Dan FallshawProduced byTom ZubryckiVioleta AyalaDan FallshawDeborah DicksonCinematographyDan Fallshaw and Violeta AyalaEdited byDan FallshawRelease date11 June 2009 2009 06 11 Sydney Running time78 minutesCountryAustraliaLanguagesSpanish Hassaniya EnglishIn 2008 Human Rights Watch published a report confirming that vestiges of slavery still affects the black minority in the Polisario refugee camps and in Western Sahara the report included a manumission document signed by the POLISARIO s Ministry of Religious and Cultural Affairs Stolen has screened in more than 80 film festivals worldwide including 2009 Toronto International Film Festival IDFA Seattle IFF Stranger Than Fiction Glasgow Film Festival MIFF One World Film Festival Docaviv It s All True Singapore IFF Cleveland IFF Norwegian Short Film Festival Frontline Club Liberation Season and Amnesty International Film Festival Stolen television premiere on PBS World as part of the Afropop Series hosted by Academy Award nominee actress Gabourey Sidibe was initially scheduled for 5 February 2013 Due to the controversy around the film the broadcast was pushed back There s been significant pressure placed on PBS to not show Stolen from US based lobbyists US law firm Foley Hoag have been paid the best part of 1 000 000 annually by the Algerian government since 2007 to lobby in the US on issues related to Western Sahara for the Algerian government who back the Polisario It was this pressure on PBS that prompted WGBH to carry out their own investigation and present the Stolen two hour special 4 Stolen premiered nationwide on 26 February on PBS 2013 with a special report carried by journalist Phillip Martin that included an interview led by WGBH journalist Callie Crossley with the directors followed by a panel discussion whether slavery exists in Western Sahara with Eric Goldstein Deputy Director Middle East and North Africa Division Human Rights Watch Madeline Campbell Professor of Urban Studies Worcester State University and Bakary Tandia Mauritanian Anti Slavery Activist 5 Contents 1 Overview 2 Controversy 3 Awards 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksOverview editIs it true my white grandmother beat you as a child asks 15 year old Leil Her mother Fetim looks at her hard still chewing her lunch They sit at a table a TV behind them as well as a doorway opening onto a bright white daylight Leil continues Violeta already knows as the camera cuts to filmmaker Violeta Ayala seated across from them Her face turns cloudy as she listens You ll be in trouble by saying we were beaten cautions Fetim Again the camera shows her instructing her daughter It s always been that slaves are beaten from a young age The scene breaks here and the film Stolen has changed Before this moment as Ayala has narrated the documentary was to film a UN sponsored family reunion program between refugees and their families Fetim had come to a refugee camp in the Algerian desert as a child some 30 years ago leaving behind her mother Embarka and her siblings With some 27 000 on the waiting list the fact that Fetim and Embarka have been selected seems miraculous And yet this story is now reframed as Ayala and Fallshaw learn that their subjects are not only refugees but also slaves The filmmakers can t begin to imagine the complications that follow this discovery Their questions elicit astonishing and also cryptic stories as Fetim and Leil as well as Fetim s cousin Matala sort through what is safe to tell the foreigners As the film reports the Polisario Liberation Front a nationalist organization backed by Algeria has been fighting with Morocco over Western Sahara for the last 34 years Neither the Moroccan government nor the Polisario want stories about slavery documented And yet with at least 2 million black people living in slavery in North Africa STOLEN insists telling such stories is only a first step to bringing out slavery s end As a result of the filmmaking process whereby the Polisario and the Moroccan government attempt to confiscate and steal the tapes STOLEN has a fragmented structure that pieces together conversations The fragments however allow the black Sahrawi s stories to be heard be it aloud or as a whisper Indeed Fetim s initial revelation that she has a white mother Deido surprises Ayala who wonders how they ended up together with so much racism in the past Deido explains sort of Saharan people are not all the same Some of them buy black people and own them others free them but keep them as their family We don t talk about this anymore A friend of Leil Tizlam is also outspoken concerning what it means to be a slave You re just scratching the surface she says her face at once poised and fierce in dim shadows They come and take the children and the parents can t say anything they have no rights Her grandmother concurs There is no law for us Tizlam says What we want is for this not to exist It should be erased it should be from the past not the present or the future Ayala and Fallshaw describe their growing concern not only for their own safety but also for all the people who trusted us with their stories As the Polisario catches wind of the new topic for Ayala and Fallshaw s film they begin to worry about their safety and those in the film Their worries are well founded as they are detained by the Polisario The filmmakers bury their tapes in the desert an apt and awful metaphor for the experiences they ve heard about and then escape to Paris where they pursue the story hoping to recover their material and make public what they ve witnessed A phone call with Leil reveals however that their own ambitions and hopes don t matter much Leil cries Trying to do good you did bad Now the police are all over us As Ayala ponders this notion in voiceover that without intending to we got Leil and Fetim in a lot of trouble the film structure makes clear the problem she s in a hotel room at a distance None of us can know what Leil and Fetim are experiencing off camera The film traces how Ayala and Fallshaw come to know the ongoing complexities of slavery As it is denied by most North African regimes in Mauritania Mali and Senegal as well as Algeria and Morocco and described here by Ursula Aboubacar the Deputy Director of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees as a cultural issue that is existing That is as Aboubacar puts it the UN can only combat the practice by bringing it to the attention of local police forces the Polisario included Ayala is horrified by the lack of power wielded by the UN or anyone else it seems Indeed as Tizlam has said There is no law for us Controversy editThe film generated significant controversy One of the character s in the documentary Fetim a refugee who live in the camps travelled from North Africa to the premiere of the documentary at the Sydney Film Festival in Australia to denounce her portrayal in the film and to say publicly that slavery doesn t exist in the refugee camps Her trip to Australia was paid for by the Polisario Front the organisation who controls the refugee camps 6 The Polisario Front have strongly opposed the film and deny the existence of slavery in the camps they administer Some Polisario supporters have claimed the translations from the non written dialect Hassaniya Arabic to English are inaccurate The film has been broadcast on the US public broadcaster PBS While disputes over the accuracy of the Hassaniya to English translations continue much of the discussion about slavery in the film is conducted in Spanish In a letter from Mr Antonio Guterres UN High Commissioner for Refugees to Mr Abdelaziz the President of the SADR Polisario dated 22 June 2009 Mr Guterres expressed regret that in the film of Violeta Ayala and Dan Fallshaw the comments of an official of the HCR have been presented out of their context He went on to state In the complete interview of about 90 minutes long Mrs Aboubacar reiterated strongly that if certain residual practices of slavery could still prevail in the subregion of West Africa she had no knowledge of such practices in the refugee camps of Tindouf He further commented that T he HCR has established for a long time a presence in the refugee camps of Tindouf It does not have any information that practices similar to slavery have taken place in the camps In fact no occurrence of this practice has been brought to the attention of the HCR This statement is contradicted in the interview on YouTube given to the filmmakers by Mrs Aboubacar Deputy Director at the UNHCR for the Middle East and North Africa who clearly states the UN is aware of the practice of slavery in the refugee camps The Human Rights Watch report published in 2008 Human Rights in Western Sahara and in the Tindouf Refugee Camps indicates evidence of slavery in the camps The report states the following page 150 In Sum credible sources testified to Human Rights Watch about vestiges of slavery that continue to affect the lives of a portion of the black minority in the Tinduf camps The practices involve historical ties between families that involve certain rights and obligations that are not always clear Being a slave does not necessarily preclude enjoying freedom of movement The issue of slavery in the Tinduf camps deserves closer scrutiny than Human Rights Watch has been able to undertake It bears mentioning that Saharawis in the Moroccan controlled Western Sahara told us that residual practices of slavery can be found there as well 7 It also noted that the Polisario is on record as firmly opposing slavery in all of its manifestations and that it has taken steps to ensure that its officials do not carry out the practice These comments were not mentioned in the film although a senior Polisario representative was interviewed by Violeta Ayala during the Manhasset negotiations and is seen on record in Stolen denying the existence of slavery in the Tindouf refugee camps In the panel discussion that followed the airing of the film Stolen by PBS World as part of the AfroPoP series Eric Goldstein the Deputy Director of Human Rights Watch in charge of the Middle East North Africa desk noted that when he had brought to the attention of officials in the camp an incident in which a dark skinned woman had been denied the ability to marry they immediately took steps to remedy the situation He also noted that this practice was the only vestige of slavery that he had found in his investigation of the camps Bakary Tandia a human rights activist in the movement against slavery originally from Mauritania commented in the post film discussion that Stolen depicts slavery in the POLISARIO camps as it is practiced in Mauritania A documentary was produced by Polisario supporter and filmmaker Carlos Gonzalez 8 refuting many of the allegations in the film It is called Robbed of Truth In this film Mr Gonzales who was a camera man who accompanied the film makers of Stolen to the Tindouf camps on their second visit before they learned about slavery Gonzalez was introduced to the filmmakers by the Poslisario representative in Australia Mohamed Kamal Fadel Gonzalez revisited the camps and re interviewed many of the participant some of whom had been jailed by the Polisario for speaking to the filmmakers about slavery The stories they told Mr Gonzalez differ significantly from the accounts given to the filmmakers of Stolen There is also a critique of Stolen published at http awsa org au wp content uploads 2010 07 critique v3 pdf pdf The Australian West Sahara Association AWSA who published the critic has been a long time supporter of the Saharawi refugee camps and the Polisario Front Awards editBest Feature Documentary Prize at the 2010 Pan African Film and Arts Festival Los Angeles USA 9 Best Editing and Special Mention at its NZ premiere at the Documentary Edge Festival 2010 10 Best International Feature Rincon International FF Puerto Rico 2010 11 Silver Olive at the XV International TV Festival Bar 2010 in Montenegro 12 Best Film at the 2010 Festival Internacional de Cine de Cuenca Ecuador 13 Grand Prix of The Art of Document at the 2010 Multimedia Festival the Art of the Document Warsaw Poland 14 Best Documentary at the 2010 Africa International Film Festival Port Harcourt Nigeria 15 Golden Oosikar for Best Documentary at the 2010 Anchorage international Film Festival Alaska USA 16 Honorable Mention at the 2010 Ojai Film Festival Ojai USA 17 Bronze Audience Award at the 2010 Amnesty International Film Festival Vancouver Canada 18 See also edit3 Stolen CamerasReferences edit Damien Murphy and Louise Schwartzkoff 12 June 2009 I am not a slave documentary subject tells Sydney Film Festival The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 11 June 2009 Dubinsky Zach 23 September 2009 Heavy Friction Slavery Sex and Stolen Art at the Toronto International Film Festival mediarights org Archived from the original on 9 March 2012 Retrieved 9 May 2009 Reporters Without Borders IPOLISARIO FRONT BRIEFLY DETAINS TWO AUSTRALIAN FILMMAKERS AT REFUGEE CAMP RSF Retrieved 9 May 2007 Violeta Ayala and Dan Fallshaw First Person The Stolen Filmmakers Explain How a Doc About Refugees Became a Controversial Film About Reported Slavery indiewire com Retrieved 26 February 2013 PBS World WORLD Special Report Behind Stolen world channel org Retrieved 26 February 2013 Fuchs Cynthia Stolen Seeing More Possibilities popmatters com au Retrieved 4 April 2011 Goldstein Eric Human Rights in Western Sahara and in the Tindouf Refugee Camps Retrieved 27 December 2017 Bodey Michael Saharan doco whips up a storm Retrieved 24 June 2009 Filmmaker Awards Pan African Film and Arts Festival Paff org Archived from the original on 22 July 2010 Retrieved 5 September 2010 Documentary Edge Awards 2010 Documentary Edge Festival 2010 Docnz org nz Retrieved 5 September 2010 Award Winners Rinconfilm com Retrieved 5 September 2010 JURY S DECISION IN THE CATEGORY OF DOCUMENTARY tvfestbar com Retrieved 27 October 2010 Stolen mejor pelicula del Festival de Cine eltiempo com ec Retrieved 27 November 2010 FESTIVAL WINNERS 2010 artofdocument pl Retrieved 5 December 2010 WINNERS 2010 africafilmfest com Archived from the original on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 6 December 2010 2010 Golden Oosikar Awards anchoragefilmfestival org Archived from the original on 20 October 2012 Retrieved 19 December 2010 Ojai Film Festival Awards the Pope and Craig T Nelson indiewire com Retrieved 8 November 2010 2010 Audience Award Winners van amnestyfilmfest ca Retrieved 25 November 2010 External links editOfficial website Stolen at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stolen 2009 Australian film amp oldid 1154813619, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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