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Zimbabwe's forgotten children | Zimbabwe's forgotten children |
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Zimbabwe: Digging for bones | Zimbabwe: Digging for bones |
By Xoliswa Sithole Producer, Zimbabwe's Forgotten Children | By Xoliswa Sithole Producer, Zimbabwe's Forgotten Children |
Zimbabwe, when I was growing up there, was the breadbasket of Africa and had one of the best education systems in Africa if not the world. | Zimbabwe, when I was growing up there, was the breadbasket of Africa and had one of the best education systems in Africa if not the world. |
The healthcare system was great, too. | The healthcare system was great, too. |
For a child born in apartheid-era South Africa, as I was, it was a land of opportunity. After my mother moved to Rhodesia, I received a first-class education, and graduated from university in post-independence Zimbabwe. | For a child born in apartheid-era South Africa, as I was, it was a land of opportunity. After my mother moved to Rhodesia, I received a first-class education, and graduated from university in post-independence Zimbabwe. |
It is startling how quickly a society can fall apart. | It is startling how quickly a society can fall apart. |
My film, Zimbabwe's Forgotten Children, follows the stories of a number of children struggling to survive in the country today. | My film, Zimbabwe's Forgotten Children, follows the stories of a number of children struggling to survive in the country today. |
Zimbabwe has become a very hard place to be poor, and poverty is ugly. Conspicuous consumerism is very evident, and greed is also very visible. | Zimbabwe has become a very hard place to be poor, and poverty is ugly. Conspicuous consumerism is very evident, and greed is also very visible. |
I shot the film undercover, after getting a permit to make another film, about my childhood and how it has shaped me. | I shot the film undercover, after getting a permit to make another film, about my childhood and how it has shaped me. |
Esther with her mother and baby sister | Esther with her mother and baby sister |
I was raised as a child of the Zanu party. My stepfather's cousin Nabaningi Sithole, founder of Zanu, was a prominent politician, and my cousin Edison Sithole the first doctor of law in southern and central Africa - he disappeared in 1975, abducted by Ian Smith because he was a human rights lawyer and political activist. | |
But while I was making this film the Zimbabwean government launched Operation Murambatsvina (Remove the filth) - a slum clearance programme that left thousands of people on the streets. | But while I was making this film the Zimbabwean government launched Operation Murambatsvina (Remove the filth) - a slum clearance programme that left thousands of people on the streets. |
This made me resolute to make another film, about Zimbabwe's children. | This made me resolute to make another film, about Zimbabwe's children. |
I focus mostly on three stories. | I focus mostly on three stories. |
There are Michelle and Grace, who live with their father Joseph. Joseph dreams of saving enough money to pay for his children's education, but for now they all work - by digging bones from a rubbish heap and selling them. | There are Michelle and Grace, who live with their father Joseph. Joseph dreams of saving enough money to pay for his children's education, but for now they all work - by digging bones from a rubbish heap and selling them. |
"What I am doing is child abuse really," he says. "They should not be working like this. It hurts me." | "What I am doing is child abuse really," he says. "They should not be working like this. It hurts me." |
There is Esther, who looks after her mother as she dies of Aids, and also her younger brother, Tino. | There is Esther, who looks after her mother as she dies of Aids, and also her younger brother, Tino. |
After her mother dies, Esther's life becomes simpler. "It's much easier to look after Tino now, because I don't have to look after mum as well," she says. | After her mother dies, Esther's life becomes simpler. "It's much easier to look after Tino now, because I don't have to look after mum as well," she says. |
Esther's case is not an unusual one in today's Zimbabwe. It's a common scenario. | Esther's case is not an unusual one in today's Zimbabwe. It's a common scenario. |
Zimbabwe: Harare's street kids | Zimbabwe: Harare's street kids |
There are also the street children. | There are also the street children. |
When I lived in Zimbabwe in my twenties, there were hardly any street children in Harare. | When I lived in Zimbabwe in my twenties, there were hardly any street children in Harare. |
Children are now not only living on the streets, they are giving birth on the streets. A second generation of street children is growing up. | Children are now not only living on the streets, they are giving birth on the streets. A second generation of street children is growing up. |
The system was supposed to take care of its people, but it has failed. | The system was supposed to take care of its people, but it has failed. |
In less than a generation, the country has changed beyond all recognition. | In less than a generation, the country has changed beyond all recognition. |
Xoliswa Sithole is a South African film-maker based in Johannesburg. She was awarded a BAFTA, for her role in producing the BBC/True Vision documentary Orphans of Nkandla, chronicling the effects of Aids in Africa. Zimbabwe's Forgotten Children can be seen BBC Four, at 2245 on Wednesday 3 March, or on the BBC iPlayer . | Xoliswa Sithole is a South African film-maker based in Johannesburg. She was awarded a BAFTA, for her role in producing the BBC/True Vision documentary Orphans of Nkandla, chronicling the effects of Aids in Africa. Zimbabwe's Forgotten Children can be seen BBC Four, at 2245 on Wednesday 3 March, or on the BBC iPlayer . |