Loading Events

  • This event has passed.
Black History Month Program: Broken Stones

Event

"Broken Stones," by Guetty Felin / Haiti, France and USA / 2012 / 61mins / Documentary / English and French

Details

Free

Sat, Feb 23, 2013

7:00 pm to 9:30 pm

Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture - Langston Hughes Auditorium
135th St. and Malcolm X Blvd.
Harlem, NY 10037

African Film Festival, Inc. and Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture are proud to present the annual Black History Month Co-presentation. The program will reflect on the two-year anniversary of the earthquake in Haiti with a special preview screening of Guetty Felin's Broken Stones, a feature-length documentary about self-recovery after the tragic Haiti quake, followed by a riveting panel discussion with the filmmaker and special guests

Special programming

Special Guest Guetty Felin with Guest Panelists moderated by Natacha Blanchet

About the Film

The oldest neighborhood of the city of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Quartier Cathédrale (Cathedral Quarter) was the most devastated sector in the city, it is also where the bulk of the documentary Broken Stones was shot. With its erected columns and open air, the ruins of the cathedral resembles an amphitheater where the daily realities of Haitian life unfolds. Midst the vestige of what was once the most beautiful cathedrals in the entire Caribbean, children play, women pray, some carry pails and jugs of water from the nearby tap, a white man dressed in black hooded priest garb appears out of nowhere, followed by a cameraman, foreign missionaries snap pictures as they pray for lost souls in a house of worship that does not belong to them, men and women roam almost aimlessly in this post-apocalyptic decor. These images are among the impressionist moments interwoven into the narrative fabric of this captivating documentary.
About Guetty Felin

About our Year-Round Community Engagement

Community engagement is essential to the AFF mission. We partner with a broad spectrum of arts and social justice organizations to spark discussion and activate the public around African cinema and culture. Learn More