Tuesday 15 March 2022 at 20:00h

Belmundo Festival

Studio Skoop, Sint-Annaplein 63, 9000 Gent, BELGIUM

On Tuesday 15 March, a selection of our films were screened at the Studio Skoop in Ghent, as part of the Belmundo Festival. A broad audience from Ghent gained new insights into the unique lifestyle of pastoralists from Niger, Tanzania and Uganda. With this screening, we aimed to open a dialogue on the importance of pastoralism, give pastoralists a voice and inspire the debate. Three experts were invited for a panel discussion afterwards: Professor Dr Han van Dijk, anthropologist and expert on pastoral conflict, Dr Pablo Manzano, ecologist and expert on the environmental impact of pastoralism and Peter van der Jagt, Director of Operations at Vétérinaires Sans Frontières Belgium.

Belmundo Festival is festival in Ghent offering a great variety of activities on international solidarity. This year’s theme was ‘the rights of humans and nature’. The fate of humans and nature are overwhelmingly linked and there is no more time to lose in the fight for a healthy and liveable planet.

Programme

Films

Niger, 2012, 17:57 min

Waynaabe: life scenes of the Wodaabe

Francesco Sincich

“Waynaabe” shows the life of nomadic Wodaabe livestock keepers through the eyes of the young mother Mooro. Her unmarried niece Mariama explains the worso, a ceremonial gathering of their clan in Akadaney. The film highlights how the Wodaabe value their cattle and deal with the challenges of gaining a livelihood in the drylands of Niger. It was commissioned by Vétérinaires Sans Frontières (VSF) Belgium to show the setting of their work on animal health.

Watch the full film here

Tanzania, 2015, 15:37 min

Olosho

Filmmakers: 6 Maasai community members in Loliondo

This video on their struggles for land rights was made by six community members from five Maasai clans in northern Tanzania during a training by InsightShare in participatory video (PV). In 1992, a hunting company from the United Arab Emirates occupied 1500 sq. km of village land in Loliondo to set up a private game reserve beside the Serengeti National Park. Since then, Maasai have been denied access to vital pasture and waterpoints for their herds. The people suffered mass eviction from their villages within the disputed land. The PV training strengthened the Maasai’s own advocacy to resist landgrabbing by foreign investors.

Watch the full film here

Uganda, 2021, 26 min

Cowherds of the Savannah

Mark Michel / Neue Celluloid Fabrik

The Karamojong are herdsmen in the North-East of Uganda and guardians of their landscape. This film illustrates how the Karamojong herdsmen make productive use of the highly variable landscape, turning even the driest plant fibers into meat and milk, whilst simultaneously dealing with frequent animal disease outbreaks and intertribal conflicts in the region.

This film was produced in collaboration with a CELEP partner, DADO (Dodoth Agro-pastoral Development Organization). It is part of a documentary series ‘Herders – Guardians of the Earth’.

Watch the series trailer here

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