‘Daughters of Chibok’, a Joel Kachi Benson’s Virtual Reality film is screening at the 76th Venice International Film Festival. The film, a story of th
‘Daughters of Chibok’, a Joel Kachi Benson’s Virtual Reality film is screening at the 76th Venice International Film Festival. The film, a story of the April 2014 abduction of 276 female students from Government Secondary School, Chibok in Borno State, Nigeria, represents Nigeria and Africa, alongside 12 other Virtual Reality films selected from around the world.
The other countries include France, China, Japan, Australia, United Kingdom, USA, Italy, Taiwan, and Israel. The VR films will be shown at the film festival scheduled to end on September 7.
The film centres on Yana Galang, a woman leader in Chibok, whose daughter was among the kidnapped Chibok girls. The film is a stark reminder that the abduction of April 2014 is still fresh in many minds, and there are women still waiting for their children to be returned. The 11-minute short film mirrors Galang’s pain as she hopefully awaits the return of her daughter while struggling to live a normal life as a peasant farmer.
Benson explained the importance of screening the film, adding that the movie was being used to raise funds for the families affected by the Chibok kidnappings. He said, “From April 14, 2014, when the Chibok girls were kidnapped, to date, 33 parents have died as a result of trauma caused by the loss of their children.
“Poverty is added to pain, as most of the mothers of the missing girls are farmers, who can barely scratch enough from the hard Chibok earth to survive and take care of their other children. On April 14 2019, to mark the 5th anniversary of the Chibok kidnappings, my team and I released our VR documentary #daughtersofchibok.
“Since then we have been sharing the film with select audiences, with the aim of raising support for the mothers of the missing Chibok girls. Last week, thanks to all our partners for their support and donations, we were able to make our first donations of fertilizer to 10 of the Chibok women, in order to help them increase their yield.
“Our goal is to reach all 112 mothers who are still waiting for the return of their daughters, and we won’t stop till we touch each and every one of them. We may not be able to bring back their daughters, but we can certainly do something to make their hard lives just a little bit easier,” Benson said.
In 2018, Benson made his first Virtual Reality film, ‘In Bakassi’, a short film that captures the plight of children living with PTSD in Internally Displaced Persons Camps in the northeast region.
NAN