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IIFF celebrates 10 years
Women
Filmmakers of Zimbabwe
May 05, 2011
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The
International Images Film Festival for Women (IIF) is the only regular
women's festival South of the Sahara. This festival provides
much needed space for women to tell their stories of their joys,
sorrows, triumphs and sadness in a country which has one of the
highest rates of abuse of women in the world. And this year, against
all odds, IIFF celebrates its 10th Anniversary. So our Zim society
cannot be so bad after all!
Ten years is
a long time for women to work together in harmony and produce a
world-class festival like IIFF. What bonds the Women Filmmakers
of Zimbabwe together to make sure the festival is a success every
year is passion. This passion began in 2002 when the inaugural Miss
Malaika beauty contest was held, and soon beauty pageants were springing
up all over the country. There was even a Miss Rural Zimbabwe where
the girls paraded bare breasted. That might all be well and good:
a woman has to earn a living, after all. But IIFF decided to challenge
the notion that woman's worth is in her "bare"
essentials.
Challenging
society's notion of woman as objects of male satisfaction
and second-class citizens who can only achieve first class status
through personal relationships with men has brought IIFF a long
way. In the ten years since IIFF was founded, Women Filmmakers of
Zimbabwe have celebrated women's passion, women's fighting
spirit, women's transformation, women's power. And now
this year we celebrate women's goals with our 10th anniversary
them Women With Goals. Every woman has her own personal goals and
WFOZ will screen films which show how women have persevered and
attained those goals. At the same time, the theme for this year's
festival, Women With Goals, reflects the United Nations' Millenium
Development Goals (MDGs').
Clearly, constituting
more than half of Zimbabwe's population, women cannot be removed
from the development equation. Equally clearly limiting women's
development to MDG 3, which concerns promoting gender equality and
empowering women, could cause women to be marginalized with respect
to all the other goals. So everybody, come to IIFF 2011, 18-26 November
in Harare and 1-3 December in Bulawayo, to find out how women the
world over have realized ALL their goals! Working together and sharing
ideas, we in Zimbabwe will reach all our goals too!
WILDTRACK with
its international and locally trained team will bring you more ideas
about what film is, and what makes a good film in our later editions.
WILDTRACK is quarterly. So it will appear four times a year. While
we wait for these later editions, another sign that Zimbabwean cinema
is at a new coming of age state of development is that I WANT A
WEDDING DRESS has proved popular not only at home but also elsewhere
on our wonderful continent.
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