Film on child slavery to be screened in remote Indian villages
It is hoped that Jhalki raises awareness about child slavery among poorer families in remote areas
12 November 2019 - 11:20
byRoli Srivastava
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Mumbai — A film about a boy trafficked to work in a carpet factory is to be screened in remote Indian villages to raise awareness about child slavery among families often targeted by human traffickers.
Due to be released on Thursday, Jhalki tracks a nine-year-old girl’s struggle to find her younger brother after their parents unwittingly sell him to a trafficker.
“We want to reach a large number of people to create awareness about child labour,” Brahmanand Siingh, director of Jhalki told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
The film was inspired by the Indian campaigner against child trafficking and Nobel peace laureate Kailash Satyarthi, Siingh said on Tuesday.
Figures released by India’s National Crime Records Bureau last month showed that about 3,000 human trafficking cases were reported in 2017, a drop of about 60% from more than 8,000 recorded in the previous year.
Traffickers target people in rural villages — largely poor, women and children — luring them to cities with the promise of good jobs but then selling them into modern day slavery.
Picture Time, a start-up that screens films in villages using inflatable, air-conditioned theatres with high quality sound, will take Jhalki to rural India and charge 50 rupees (about 11c) a ticket.
“The reach of Picture Time goes right down to interiors where there are no theatres. We can show the film, create awareness,” Siingh said.
Campaigners at Kailash Satyarthi Children’s Foundation will also screen the film in villages where they work to alert residents to traffickers targeting their area.
India’s multiple film industries churn out thousands of films every year, yet it has the lowest number of cinema screens per capita in the world after China, the US and Britain, consultancy KPMG said in a report this year.
Some of the poorer states of India, such as Chattisgarh, Bihar and Jharkhand, record the highest numbers of children trafficked for sex or work but have few cinema theatres.
Sushil Chaudhary, Picture Time’s founder, said they screened Padman, a film on menstrual hygiene, and Toilet — A Love Story about open defecation, in villages in the last couple of years.
Said Chaudhary, “Jhalki is an important film. It should go places.”
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Film on child slavery to be screened in remote Indian villages
It is hoped that Jhalki raises awareness about child slavery among poorer families in remote areas
Mumbai — A film about a boy trafficked to work in a carpet factory is to be screened in remote Indian villages to raise awareness about child slavery among families often targeted by human traffickers.
Due to be released on Thursday, Jhalki tracks a nine-year-old girl’s struggle to find her younger brother after their parents unwittingly sell him to a trafficker.
“We want to reach a large number of people to create awareness about child labour,” Brahmanand Siingh, director of Jhalki told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
The film was inspired by the Indian campaigner against child trafficking and Nobel peace laureate Kailash Satyarthi, Siingh said on Tuesday.
Figures released by India’s National Crime Records Bureau last month showed that about 3,000 human trafficking cases were reported in 2017, a drop of about 60% from more than 8,000 recorded in the previous year.
Traffickers target people in rural villages — largely poor, women and children — luring them to cities with the promise of good jobs but then selling them into modern day slavery.
Picture Time, a start-up that screens films in villages using inflatable, air-conditioned theatres with high quality sound, will take Jhalki to rural India and charge 50 rupees (about 11c) a ticket.
“The reach of Picture Time goes right down to interiors where there are no theatres. We can show the film, create awareness,” Siingh said.
Campaigners at Kailash Satyarthi Children’s Foundation will also screen the film in villages where they work to alert residents to traffickers targeting their area.
India’s multiple film industries churn out thousands of films every year, yet it has the lowest number of cinema screens per capita in the world after China, the US and Britain, consultancy KPMG said in a report this year.
Some of the poorer states of India, such as Chattisgarh, Bihar and Jharkhand, record the highest numbers of children trafficked for sex or work but have few cinema theatres.
Sushil Chaudhary, Picture Time’s founder, said they screened Padman, a film on menstrual hygiene, and Toilet — A Love Story about open defecation, in villages in the last couple of years.
Said Chaudhary, “Jhalki is an important film. It should go places.”
Thomson Reuters Foundation
ICC gives ‘Terminator’ DRC warlord its harshest sentence yet
Lest we forget the victims of hatred
HANS PIENAAR: ANC not yet close to understanding the damage Robert Mugabe did to SA
Beyond the Arab Sping
Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.
Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.
Most Read
Published by Arena Holdings and distributed with the Financial Mail on the last Thursday of every month except December and January.