Berliner Boersenzeitung - Restitution in focus as Africa takes Berlin fest spotlight

EUR -
AED 4.244436
AFN 73.389503
ALL 96.041475
AMD 437.227891
ANG 2.068863
AOA 1059.809568
ARS 1591.117901
AUD 1.663809
AWG 2.082925
AZN 1.95873
BAM 1.954592
BBD 2.335977
BDT 142.332035
BGN 1.975509
BHD 0.436313
BIF 3444.885879
BMD 1.155736
BND 1.48259
BOB 8.014012
BRL 6.040997
BSD 1.159793
BTN 109.092106
BWP 15.805369
BYN 3.437405
BYR 22652.420245
BZD 2.332679
CAD 1.597868
CDF 2635.077814
CHF 0.915938
CLF 0.026863
CLP 1060.688624
CNY 7.976305
CNH 7.983216
COP 4277.782432
CRC 539.269051
CUC 1.155736
CUP 30.626997
CVE 110.196419
CZK 24.476637
DJF 206.535037
DKK 7.471618
DOP 69.927086
DZD 153.324525
EGP 60.76882
ERN 17.336036
ETB 181.097361
FJD 2.598383
FKP 0.863596
GBP 0.865357
GEL 3.1147
GGP 0.863596
GHS 12.680109
GIP 0.863596
GMD 84.943654
GNF 10165.761288
GTQ 8.876476
GYD 242.648987
HKD 9.035831
HNL 30.712152
HRK 7.532279
HTG 152.086665
HUF 387.510676
IDR 19534.245254
ILS 3.607282
IMP 0.863596
INR 108.781896
IQD 1519.467505
IRR 1517654.369857
ISK 143.206866
JEP 0.863596
JMD 182.687885
JOD 0.819347
JPY 184.298222
KES 149.910497
KGS 101.068161
KHR 4651.145599
KMF 493.499383
KPW 1040.178735
KRW 1741.537699
KWD 0.354915
KYD 0.966507
KZT 559.596576
LAK 25005.762183
LBP 103706.496104
LKR 364.767721
LRD 212.827547
LSL 19.536695
LTL 3.412587
LVL 0.699093
LYD 7.395525
MAD 10.808973
MDL 20.279642
MGA 4834.054262
MKD 61.622775
MMK 2427.238714
MNT 4125.361797
MOP 9.339568
MRU 46.21164
MUR 53.891528
MVR 17.856098
MWK 2011.174446
MXN 20.55545
MYR 4.617149
MZN 73.903122
NAD 19.53661
NGN 1599.98893
NIO 42.683805
NOK 11.207202
NPR 174.54888
NZD 1.9938
OMR 0.444374
PAB 1.159783
PEN 4.010639
PGK 5.010925
PHP 69.637122
PKR 323.708741
PLN 4.281654
PYG 7546.401433
QAR 4.229668
RON 5.094603
RSD 117.440085
RUB 93.618694
RWF 1693.560664
SAR 4.335627
SBD 9.29447
SCR 16.592438
SDG 694.597244
SEK 10.810885
SGD 1.482844
SHP 0.867101
SLE 28.373451
SLL 24235.212834
SOS 662.793245
SRD 43.155748
STD 23921.396123
STN 24.484974
SVC 10.148772
SYP 128.226865
SZL 19.547089
THB 37.968233
TJS 11.105189
TMT 4.045075
TND 3.403382
TOP 2.782734
TRY 51.276297
TTD 7.88616
TWD 36.924603
TZS 2976.087716
UAH 50.922669
UGX 4291.329287
USD 1.155736
UYU 46.95078
UZS 14145.319039
VES 534.054338
VND 30438.611836
VUV 138.119748
WST 3.164637
XAF 655.554687
XAG 0.016593
XAU 0.00026
XCD 3.123433
XCG 2.090317
XDR 0.815303
XOF 655.560356
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.815943
ZAR 19.686745
ZMK 10403.013897
ZMW 21.717766
ZWL 372.146432
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.91

    +0.17%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    22.68

    +0.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.3700

    16.06

    +2.3%

  • BCC

    1.0800

    74.65

    +1.45%

  • RIO

    0.7700

    87.54

    +0.88%

  • GSK

    1.7500

    54.7

    +3.2%

  • BCE

    -0.3400

    25.49

    -1.33%

  • NGG

    1.9600

    84.29

    +2.33%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    32.47

    +0.03%

  • BTI

    0.6900

    58.45

    +1.18%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    14.72

    +0.41%

  • JRI

    0.2400

    12.1

    +1.98%

  • AZN

    1.3600

    187.14

    +0.73%

  • BP

    0.6200

    45.41

    +1.37%

Restitution in focus as Africa takes Berlin fest spotlight
Restitution in focus as Africa takes Berlin fest spotlight / Photo: Odd ANDERSEN - AFP

Restitution in focus as Africa takes Berlin fest spotlight

African cinema has seized the spotlight at this week's Berlin film festival, probing contemporary realities while demanding attention to historical crimes.

Text size:

The 74th Berlinale, as the event is known, is the most politically minded of Europe's top cinema showcases and has rolled out the red carpet for a range of high profile -- and highly charged -- new releases from the continent.

Among the most prominent is "Dahomey" by French-Senegalese director Mati Diop, whose supernatural Netflix drama "Atlantics" made her the first black woman to compete in Cannes.

Her new taut, powerful documentary recounts the 2021 journey home of 26 precious artifacts of the Dahomey kingdom to Benin from a Paris museum.

In the film, Diop has one of the statues, that of King Ghezo, recount in a Fon-language voice-over his land being pillaged by the French, the circumstances of his own exile and his ultimate repatriation in Cotonou museum.

"It was particularly important that the statue speak in a language of Benin and not in French, the language of the coloniser," the director told AFP.

While acknowledging the return's importance, Diop said she had no intention of "celebrating" the decision by French President Emmanuel Macron, noting that only 26 were restituted "against the more than 7,000 works still held captive" in Paris.

"Dahomey" is one of 20 films vying for Berlin's Golden Bear top prize, to be awarded on Saturday by Kenyan-Mexican Oscar winner Lupita Nyong'o, the festival's first black jury president.

Variety hailed the film as "superb", calling it "a striking, stirring example of the poetry that can result when the dead and the dispossessed speak to and through the living".

- 'Contribution to healing' -

Screening out of competition in Berlin, documentary "The Empty Grave" traces the mission of Tanzanian activist John Mbano to secure the return of human remains of ancestors killed by the German colonial army.

Experts say between 200,000 and 300,000 members of the indigenous population were brutally murdered by German troops during the so-called Maji Maji Rebellion.

Told through the lens of intergenerational trauma, the film describes the early 20th century racist "research" carried out on the remains of victims whose memory remains alive in their communities.

And it profiles a contemporary movement in Berlin fighting to expand Germany's vaunted culture of historical atonement beyond the Nazi period to encompass colonial-era crimes in Africa.

Directors Agnes Lisa Wegner of Germany and Tanzania's Cece Mlay said at the festival they hoped the film would serve as a "contribution to healing".

- An inflatable screen -

Mauritian-born filmmaker Abderrahmane Sissako, whose Oscar-nominated 2014 drama Timbuktu dazzled critics, joined the race in Berlin with "Black Tea", an eye-opening account of African immigrants living in China.

The love story between a young Ivorian woman and a Guangzhou tea merchant sees them having to surmount not only cultural differences but also language barriers, in a film shot in Mandarin, French, English and Portuguese.

"When Africans leave for China they learn Chinese and when Chinese people do business in Africa, they learn Wolof or Swahili," Sissako told AFP.

"Black Tea" is Sissako's first feature in a decade. In Berlin, he explained some of the challenges faced by African auteurs.

"There is no real cinema industry (at home) so we don't have the technical crews we need," Sissako told AFP.

A spotty film distribution network also poses a challenge.

"The majority of (African) countries don't have many movie theatres anymore. They were torn down to build shopping malls," Diop told AFP.

"The existing cinemas are too expensive so only a tiny elite minority can have access."

Senegalese filmmaker Mamadou Dia, whose well-received drama "Demba" explores the often taboo subject of mental illness, said he has often had to get creative to ensure his movies find their audiences.

He said he has travelled through his country "with a three-metre (10-foot) inflatable screen" to show his work in "villages, followed by debates".

International festivals can help connect African films with cinema-goers, the directors said, though there is still much work to be done.

Only one African film has won the Golden Bear in the Berlinale's 74-year history, South Africa's "Carmen In Khayelitsha" by Mark Dornford-May in 2005.

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)