Barefoot to Herat explained

Barefoot to Herat
Director:Majid Majidi
Producer:Majid Majidi, Fouad Nahas
Distributor:2t3mtv Television Inc. (Canada)
Runtime:70 min.
Country:Iran
Language:Persian

Barefoot to Herat (Persian: پابرهنه تا هرات , Pa Berahneh ta Herat) is a 2002 Iranian film by Majid Majidi. It is a documentary about the plight of Afghan refugees just after the 2001 military offensive against the Taliban.[1] [2] [3]

Background

The film was shot primarily at two refugee camps in Western Afghanistan, one called Makaki in a territory controlled by the Northern Alliance. The rest of the film was shot at another camp called Maslakh, in the city of Herat. The camps are makeshift and conditions are inhumane, making them ill-suited for families whose lives have been torn apart by war. Through interviews with peasants, soldiers, children, and the elderly, Majidi finds the human spirit intact, and still in need of joy and memories and dreams.

Awards

Sources

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=wPKu6zD_j4AC&q=%22Barefoot+to+Herat&pg=PA188 Globalizing Afghanistan: Terrorism, War, and the Rhetoric of Nation Building
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=oV9WwxXbCB8C&dq=%22Barefoot+to+Herat%22&pg=PA194 The A to Z of Iran
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=xhzzDwAAQBAJ&q=%22Barefoot%20to%20Herat Historical Dictionary of Middle Eastern Cinema