Content area
Full Text
Dear Mandela: When the South African government promises to 'eradicate the slums' and begins evicting shack dwellers from their homes, three friends who live in Durban's vast shanty towns refuse to be moved. DEAR MANDELA follows their journey from their shacks to the highest court in the land as they invoke Nelson Mandela's example and become leaders in an inspiring social movement.
Mazwi, an enlightened schoolboy; Zama, an AIDS orphan and Mnikelo, a mischievous shopkeeper are part of a new generation who feel betrayed by the broken promises of Mandela's own political party, the African National Congress. Determined to stop the evictions, they met with their communities by candlelight and discovered that the new innocuoussounding 'Slums Act' legalized the evictions and violated the rights enshrined in the country's landmark Constitution. With the help of pro bono lawyers, they challenged the Slums Act all the way to the highest court in the land - the hallowed Constitutional Court.
The extraordinary achievements of the shack dwellers did not come without a price. As the beloved Mandela's portrait beams down from schoolroom chalkboards and shack walls, Mazwi, Zama and Mnikelo learn of the sacrifices that come with leadership. Shack demolitions, assassination attempts and government repression test their resolve to continue. By turns devastating, inspiring and funny, DEAR MANDELA offers a new perspective on the role that young people can play in political change and is a fascinating portrait of South Africa coming of age.
Dara Kell is an award-winning South African documentary and television editor. Her editing work includes Academy Award-nominated 'Jesus Camp'; 'The Reckoning' (which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival) and Emmy Award winner 'Diamond at the Rock'. Her clients include National Geographic, Discovery Network, History Channel and MTV She was a field producer for the Amnesty International documentary 'Human Rights, Human Needs' and has edited short films for Human Rights Watch and the MacArthur Foundation. Darà is also a media educator and facilitates camera and editing trainings with grassroots groups across the United States. She graduated from Rhodes University with a Bachelor of Journalism in Documentary Filmmaking and Political Science. Her thesis film 'Indlini Yam' (In My House) won the Dolphin Award for Best Documentary.
Faktorovich: What are the challenges of working with interviewees that...