Duhozanye: A Rwandan Village of Widows is a feature Norwegian documentary film for television from 2011 by director Karoline Frogner.[1]
Duhozanye | |
---|---|
Directed by | Karoline Frogner |
Country of origin | Norway |
Release | |
Original release |
|
Norway's previous minister of justice, Knut Storberget, referred to Duhozanye in his latest book: "a film about a community of widows in Rwanda, an insightful and intense depiction of these widows."[2]
The Kinyarwanda word duhozanye means "let us console one another".[3] Frogner's film documents the development of the Duhozanye Association founded by Daphrose Mukarutamu, a Tutsi who lost her husband and nine of her eleven children to the Rwandan genocide. The community was at first a group of neighbours who buried the dead and cared for twenty orphans, but grew to a network of some 4000 widows, both Hutus and Tutsis, who cared for each other and for the orphans of the genocide, running courses, starting businesses and participating in national reconciliation.[1][4]
![]() | This article about a historical documentary film is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |