Sairash was happily married for more than a quarter century until the day her husband took a second, younger wife.
El-Banate Dol (These Girls) plunges us into the universe of girls living on the streets of Cairo, a universe of violence and oppression, as well as freedom. Whether they are women, children or mothers, Tata, Mariam and Abeer live only in the present. Their days are full of perils, fights, dances and laughs.
UntitledThe feminin clones are looking at each other. One starts breathing at the other and stains her face from black and white into colour.
What is daily life like in Iraq? Do you think they have more rights now than they did under the yoke of Saddam? How do they deal with the growing insecurity that has seized this Arabic country? For the first time since operation ?Enduring Freedom?, a journalist spends several weeks living with families in Baghdad, in order to report on their day to day lives. And he does it by following the steps of Mazi Hermes (Nqwa, 1961), an Iraqi living in Barcelona who returns home after spending thirteen years in Spain.
UntitledA trip by Spain accompanying to the only organization who fights by the rights of the sculptures. His representative crosses great part of Spanish geography with his traveling office looking for people whom they love to adopt to one of his strange sculptures. The condition that demands the adoptive parents is that the sculpture participates in the daily life of its new family. This nonlucrative and of course nongovernmental organization, tries to reinforce the bonds that have united us to the sculptures from ancestral times and takes advantage of any opportunity to vindicate and to denounce the situation that million sculptures suffer. Its motto is: "I will do everything what is to my reach to obtain that the sculptures enjoy one more a worthier life". Although we do not know by where she will walk this peculiar organization, insurance that continuous with its arduous work.
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