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The
plight of Afghan children, within the country and in exile abroad,
has been the subject of numerous articles, films and documentaries,
many of them award-winning. But having reaped a financial bonanza
from the pathos of the children's lives, most of the foreign journalists
have distanced themselves and moved on to the next story.
Not so 24-year-old, Stanford Masters student, Pakistani
Sharmeen Obaid. Approximately eight months ago, while studying at
Smith College, Obaid wrote to New York Times Television, with a
proposal for a documentary about Afghan refugee children in Pakistan.
New York Times Television, a documentary production company that
makes almost a 100 hours of television for local and cable channels,
is inundated with similar proposals, and as the president of the
company, William Abrams would tell you, "Few are ever worth
pursuing."
Obaid's proposal however, obviously was. Not only did the company
cough up 10, 000 dollars for Sharmeen's film - an unprecedented
gesture for an unknown aspiring filmmaker with not one project to
her credit - but Abrams went to the extent of offering Obaid a job.
In a letter of recommendation to Stanford University, Abrams wrote:
"When you're done educating her, please send her back our way.
There will be a job waiting for her at New York Times Television."
Obaid had been freelancing for the Canadian weekly newspaper, The
Coast, and while doing a story on Afghan refugee children in Pakistan
for the paper, she decided she would expand on this theme by making
a film on the Afghan camps in Pakistan. Says Obaid: "I felt
that Pakistan had always been unfavourably represented in the western
media, despite the fact that we were a frontline state in the war
against terrorism. When I visited Pakistan in December 2001, I learnt
that an increasing number of Afghan refugees had made their way
into Karachi, and while interviewing several of them, I realised
that the voices of these children had been lost in the hype of September
11, Osama bin Laden and Al-Qaeda. I wanted the western world to
see how these children lived, and to understand the enormous burden
on Pakistan's resources from housing and feeding close to two million
refugees."
Obaid managed to obtain a grant of 6000 US dollars from her college,
Smith, for the film, but needed at least another 10,000 dollars
to make it happen. Thus, began a fund-generating drive that had
Sharmeen writing out to the producers of assorted news programmes,
including Dateline and 20/20 . All of them expressed keen interest
in her project, but that did not translate into funds. New York
Television Company, however, was clearly substantially impressed
- and Obaid's film became within reach.
By now Obaid had acquired a partner for her proposed enterprise:
New York-based Pakistani, Mohammed Naqvi of Pakistani origin. Mohammed
received primary and secondary education between America and Pakistan,
so he is very much a product of both worlds. It was while attending
high school in Pakistan, that Mohammed was drawn towards performance
and art. After graduating from UPenn, Mohammed founded an off-off
Broadway theatre arts company going by the name of B.L.A.H Productions,
in January 2002.
Obaid and Mohammed headed for Pakistan, and spent a scorching summer
there, in madrassas, camps and on the streets, interviewing dozens
of Afghan children. "Miraculously," says Obaid "We
managed to get unprecedented access to the children, even those
in madrassas, where a young woman, accompanied by an all-male television
crew, is not exactly smiled upon." The virtually unfettered
access gave the duo an insight into the children's lives and their
minds. It was a disturbing journey of trauma, fears, and uncertainty
- but also of dreams and hopes. And that is what the film is about:
real-life accounts of children of war and exile.
"These eight and 10-year-olds have no future. It's no wonder
then, why so many of them are attracted to the madrassas, where
they get free food, clothing and shelter," says Obaid.
The film, Terror's Children, is to be aired on March 25, at the
launch of a new channel in North America, the Discovery Times Channel,
a collaborative venture between The New York Times and Discovery
Communications. Interestingly, the channel is promoting it as the
personal journey of a Pakistani woman, and the buck doesn't stop
there.
Several other channels have also offered Obaid/Naqvi a slot for
their film. On January 6, at the Television Critics Association
meeting in Los Angeles, where she had been invited to speak, Obaid
met with several journalists from leading publications such as TV
Digest, the San Francisco Chronicle and Multi Media News, who interviewed
her about the film.
All this, even before the film has aired!
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