2001 film
Woman by Woman: New Hope for the Villages of India |
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Directed by | Dorothy Fadiman |
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Produced by | Kristin Atwell |
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Narrated by | Dorothy Fadiman |
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Cinematography | Daniel Myers |
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Release date | |
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Running time | 28 minutes |
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Country | United States |
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Languages | English and Hindi |
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Woman by Woman: New Hope for the Villages of India is a 2001 documentary film by filmmaker, Dorothy Fadiman.
Synopsis
The film follows several women from small villages in India who come out of seclusion to serve their communities by teaching, particularly to other women, about family planning resources. The women are trained through Janani which is a non-profit health organization founded in the state of Bihar, India by way of DKT International. The women become rural medical practitioners and counselors.[1][2]
Release and reception
The film premiered in Palo Alto and afterwards, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni presided as a moderator for a panel which included Kavita Nandini Ramdas(the president at the time of the Global Fund for Women), LS Aravinda (coordinator with Association for India's Development), and Richard T. Schlosberg III.[1][2] The film also participated twice in 2001 and 2009 at the United Nations Association Film Festival at Stanford University.[3][4] The documentary won a FREDDIE Award at the 2002 International Health and Medical Media Festival.[4]
Rediff.com described the message of the film as "change individuals can make". This message is spread by examples, such as a woman being encouraged by her mother-in-law to advance in the community, and a woman that works as an equal with her husband.[2]
References
External links