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thanks to George (Chitanand) for the following

article. Scroll down to 5th paragraph for mention of

Amma.

 

 

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

LA Weekly

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

 

http://www.laweekly.com/ink/05/09/film-mann.php

 

People, Chaos, Everything

by Andrew Mann

How photographer Zana Briski got Born Into Brothels

 

"I didn’t want to go to India," says photographer Zana

Briski, co-director — with former HBO editor Ross

Kauffman — of the Oscar-shortlisted documentary Born

Into Brothels. "It was the last place on Earth I

wanted to go. I don’t like crowds of people. Chaos.

Everything. But I couldn’t do anything else. There

wasn’t a choice. The alternative would have been

death."

 

Briski, 37 and a World Press Photo winner, was working

for the Baltimore Sun back in the mid-’90s. "The Sun

would have me shoot some woman who just finished a

quilt. Or somebody’s cow," she says. "I was driving

all the time. It was awful. And meanwhile, there were

gang wars going on down the block. But they didn’t

want to know about that."

 

On January 1, 1995, she quit. On January 2, she was on

a plane to India. A personal odyssey, as it were,

though as things turned out, she spent the next seven

years on the subcontinent — taking photographs,

befriending the children of prostitutes, moving into a

Calcutta whorehouse. And making a movie.

 

The result is as much a product of Briski’s

spirituality as it was of her tenacity. It is also —

at the risk of writing Hallmark copy — a portrait of

hope: The dignity and wisdom with which Briski and

Kauffman portray the beautiful children in their film

can actually make the viewer believe that, at the end

of each teeming, squalid street of Calcutta’s

red-light district, there is something other than a

dank dead end.

 

For Briski, the plight of Calcutta’s children is

inexorably connected to her bond with Sister Ammachi,

India’s "hugging saint," thought by some to be an

incarnation of the Divine Mother of Hinduism. Ammachi,

whose world tours attract thousands of devotees, had

donated land for a school for the children of the

red-light district — land Briski planned to visit on

that 1995 New Year’s pilgrimage.

 

The daughter of an English father descended from

Polish Jews and an Iraqi-Jewish mother who was exiled

to Israel at age 14, then made her way to London,

Briski was educated at Cambridge, as a biology major —

until she refused to experiment on animals. She

switched to theology.

 

As in comparative religion? "No, that would have been

interesting," she says. "It was standard-issue

Anglicanism."

 

Which, obviously, didn’t take. "I don’t like to talk

about religion too much, because I don’t want to be

categorized. I want to be able to communicate and

reach people and talk about having your heart open,

which is more simple than saying, ‘Oh, I have an

Indian guru.’ Which is not the truth anyway. Sister

Ammachi is not my guru, though it was an undeniable

connection to her that led me to do this work."

 

The work has included the founding of Kids With

Cameras, a nonprofit organization ("I bought

Nonprofits for Dummies," Briski laughs) devoted to

expanding the project into more of the world’s slums

(poor kids in Cairo, Jerusalem and Haiti have been

added to the roster of works in progress) and selling

prints of the photographs.

 

That Briski and Kauffman — once romantic partners, now

collaborators of another sort — have continued to

advance the children’s interests certainly sets them

apart from documentarians who parachute into a

situation and then vanish in a vapor trail. But "Zana

didn’t go in there trying to save kids," says

Kauffman. "She actually went in there by accident and

was just sort of reacting to what she saw. We’ve been

in credit-card debt, over $100,000 combined, for the

last five years. It’s not like we’re rich Americans

trying to save the world."

 

"Sonagachi [Calcutta’s red-light district] was almost

too dangerous," Briski says. "And they’re very smart,"

she adds. "Even if you go with a hidden camera, they

know. People are literally terrified of the camera.

Many of the women are lying, going back and forth

between their villages and the city, saying they’re

working in a factory. And there’s all this other

illegal stuff going on."

 

"I was too ignorant for trepidation," Kauffman says.

 

"I just wanted to make sure I did the job right."

 

The filmmakers, who got their initial funding from the

Jerome Foundation and the Sundance Institute’s

documentary fund, sold the film early on to HBO, where

it will air in the fall. But money has never been the

issue. Nor is it now.

 

"I guess, for me," Briski said, "it’s a choice of

whether to live in the world or retreat from it. If I

live in it, I have to respond."

 

http://www.kids-with-cameras.org/calcutta/

 

 

 

 

 

Meet the all-new My - Try it today!

 

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---Om Namah Shivaya

 

This morning 1/25/05 it was announced that Born Into Brothels was

nominated for an Academy Award

 

Peace,

 

GeorgeSon

 

P.S. For those of you who are unaware the documentary is partially

about Ammachi's efforts to educate red light children of Calcutta. If

you like please read the Director's interview below.

 

 

> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

> LA Weekly

> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

>

> http://www.laweekly.com/ink/05/09/film-mann.php

>

> People, Chaos, Everything

> by Andrew Mann

> How photographer Zana Briski got Born Into Brothels

>

> "I didn't want to go to India," says photographer Zana

> Briski, co-director — with former HBO editor Ross

> Kauffman — of the Oscar-shortlisted documentary Born

> Into Brothels. "It was the last place on Earth I

> wanted to go. I don't like crowds of people. Chaos.

> Everything. But I couldn't do anything else. There

> wasn't a choice. The alternative would have been

> death."

>

> Briski, 37 and a World Press Photo winner, was working

> for the Baltimore Sun back in the mid-'90s. "The Sun

> would have me shoot some woman who just finished a

> quilt. Or somebody's cow," she says. "I was driving

> all the time. It was awful. And meanwhile, there were

> gang wars going on down the block. But they didn't

> want to know about that."

>

> On January 1, 1995, she quit. On January 2, she was on

> a plane to India. A personal odyssey, as it were,

> though as things turned out, she spent the next seven

> years on the subcontinent — taking photographs,

> befriending the children of prostitutes, moving into a

> Calcutta whorehouse. And making a movie.

>

> The result is as much a product of Briski's

> spirituality as it was of her tenacity. It is also —

> at the risk of writing Hallmark copy — a portrait of

> hope: The dignity and wisdom with which Briski and

> Kauffman portray the beautiful children in their film

> can actually make the viewer believe that, at the end

> of each teeming, squalid street of Calcutta's

> red-light district, there is something other than a

> dank dead end.

>

> For Briski, the plight of Calcutta's children is

> inexorably connected to her bond with Sister Ammachi,

> India's "hugging saint," thought by some to be an

> incarnation of the Divine Mother of Hinduism. Ammachi,

> whose world tours attract thousands of devotees, had

> donated land for a school for the children of the

> red-light district — land Briski planned to visit on

> that 1995 New Year's pilgrimage.

>

> The daughter of an English father descended from

> Polish Jews and an Iraqi-Jewish mother who was exiled

> to Israel at age 14, then made her way to London,

> Briski was educated at Cambridge, as a biology major —

> until she refused to experiment on animals. She

> switched to theology.

>

> As in comparative religion? "No, that would have been

> interesting," she says. "It was standard-issue

> Anglicanism."

>

> Which, obviously, didn't take. "I don't like to talk

> about religion too much, because I don't want to be

> categorized. I want to be able to communicate and

> reach people and talk about having your heart open,

> which is more simple than saying, `Oh, I have an

> Indian guru.' Which is not the truth anyway. Sister

> Ammachi is not my guru, though it was an undeniable

> connection to her that led me to do this work."

>

> The work has included the founding of Kids With

> Cameras, a nonprofit organization ("I bought

> Nonprofits for Dummies," Briski laughs) devoted to

> expanding the project into more of the world's slums

> (poor kids in Cairo, Jerusalem and Haiti have been

> added to the roster of works in progress) and selling

> prints of the photographs.

>

> That Briski and Kauffman — once romantic partners, now

> collaborators of another sort — have continued to

> advance the children's interests certainly sets them

> apart from documentarians who parachute into a

> situation and then vanish in a vapor trail. But "Zana

> didn't go in there trying to save kids," says

> Kauffman. "She actually went in there by accident and

> was just sort of reacting to what she saw. We've been

> in credit-card debt, over $100,000 combined, for the

> last five years. It's not like we're rich Americans

> trying to save the world."

>

> "Sonagachi [Calcutta's red-light district] was almost

> too dangerous," Briski says. "And they're very smart,"

> she adds. "Even if you go with a hidden camera, they

> know. People are literally terrified of the camera.

> Many of the women are lying, going back and forth

> between their villages and the city, saying they're

> working in a factory. And there's all this other

> illegal stuff going on."

>

> "I was too ignorant for trepidation," Kauffman says.

>

> "I just wanted to make sure I did the job right."

>

> The filmmakers, who got their initial funding from the

> Jerome Foundation and the Sundance Institute's

> documentary fund, sold the film early on to HBO, where

> it will air in the fall. But money has never been the

> issue. Nor is it now.

>

> "I guess, for me," Briski said, "it's a choice of

> whether to live in the world or retreat from it. If I

> live in it, I have to respond."

>

> http://www.kids-with-cameras.org/calcutta/

>

>

>

>

>

> Meet the all-new My - Try it today!

>

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This morning 1/25/05 it was announced that Born Into Brothels was

 

nominated for an Academy Award

 

 

 

Peace,

 

 

 

GeorgeSon

 

 

 

P.S. For those of you who are unaware the documentary is partially

 

about Ammachi's efforts to educate red light children of Calcutta. If

 

you like please read the Director's interview below.

 

 

 

 

 

Is Amma mentioned in the film?

 

 

--

 

 

Version: 7.0.300 / Virus Database: 265.7.3 - Release 1/24/2005

 

 

 

 

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Rick Archer asks:

 

Is Amma mentioned in the film?

 

To be honest I am not sure. The Review of the Documentary in the

Village Voice (posted in our very own ) specifically

mentions Amma's role in donating the land for the school.

 

The Film Critic probably got this info from the film itself?

 

Again I am not certain. From this son's perspective the very secular

Village Voice weekly does not go out of its way to tout religious

philanthropy.

 

Sorry I cannot be definitive for you.

 

Can anyone shed more light?

 

Shanti,

 

GeorgeSon

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