suffering violent sexual attacks as the result of wars that raged in the DRC for nearly a decade.
In the early ’90s, conflict in Rwanda began to spill over into the DRC. By 1994, rebel groups from Rwanda who fled to the DRC to escape being tried for war crimes began invading Congolese villages.
Although the conflict ended in 2004, the people continue to suffer.
“The infrastructure is wiped out, medical structure is gone, women are emotionally and physically scarred,” Blanding said. “We met generations of women from the same family who had been assaulted.”
“It’s not the type of place where you can show up with a camera and just announce you’re shooting a documentary,” he said. “We partnered with several humanitarian and Christian groups that helped us gain access to the country.”
After the long wait for surgery and physical healing, these women often face rejection from their society and their own families.
Recording their stories was often difficult, Blanding said.
“We came across many women who had heartbreaking stories, but I think the fact that we were there helped them in a way,” Blanding said. “That we came from the other side of the world to record their stories helped them realize that someone cares about them and that they matter.”
“This was the most meaningful project I’ve worked on as an aspiring filmmaker,” Blanding said. “It was more than a film. I was being an advocate; it was bigger than me.”
After graduation, Blanding hopes to pursue a graduate degree in film. His current projects include a documentary on environmental issues in Belize, a film on the influence of baseball and sugar in the Dominican Republic, and a short documentary on a school for girls in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. |