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Steps for the Future Video Collection - Southern Africa

Region

Southern Africa

Programme Summary

The Steps for the Future video collection is a collection of films from seven different Southern African countries. The films highlight "positive, provocative, humourous, brave and unusual stories about how individuals are confronting their lives and how societies are having to change under the impact of HIV/AIDS."

The collection emerged out of a collaboration of Southern African and international filmmakers, broadcasters, AIDS organisations and people living with HIV / AIDS who have united to produce professional films. "These compelling stories reveal the effect of the HIV / AIDS pandemic on the lives of individuals, families, communities and nations."

Communication Strategies

The films form part of a media–advocacy campaign, which is intended to promote debate and discussion around HIV/AIDS, as well as related topics such as disclosure, discrimination, treatment, and living positively.

Diverse perspectives are presented through the eyes of a range of people and communities. "These stories celebrate the strength of the people who share and reflect on their experiences of HIV/AIDS. Steps for the Future not only challenges fear and stigmatisation with stories of hope, but also dismantles discrimination and ignorance by cultivating tolerance and promoting the belief that actually, life is a beautiful thing."

Many well recognised professionals in the international field of documentary filmmaking have collaborated to create this. "The films have been screened at a wide range of festivals, and are available for organisations to use." To maximise the use and effectiveness of the films, an accompanying facilitators guide was developed.

Development Issues

HIV/AIDS

Key Points

"Southern Africa is the new centre of the global AIDS crisis. Nowhere else in the world is it spreading as fast as in this region. Statistics are alarming. The average life expectancy of around 65 years is said to drop to 40, or maybe 30, within ten years. Every second a fifteen-year-old in South Africa could die by 2010. Already every fourth university student in many of the universities throughout the region is HIV positive. There are 12 million AIDS orphans in sub-Saharan Africa. This is the part of the story, which has been receiving all the attention. But there is another one, happening now, which has another focus, other than the impending tragedy. Most people are still living with HIV, not dying from AIDS."

The project aims to show the living, rather than the dying, and their struggle to avert the tragedy. "Living with HIV is an incredibly intimate and personal experience, and yet it is an experience that needs to be shared if families, communities and the public at large are to fully understand the reality and consequences of the disease. This understanding is needed in order to demystify and destigmatise HIV and those affected by it, and thus remove the veil of secrecy that arguably sustains the virus' spread."

Partners

Finnish Broadcasting Company / YLE2 Documentaries, Day Zero Film & Video from South Africa, Government of Finland, Swedish Agency for International Development Cooperation (SIDA), Danish International Development Assistance (DANIDA), Department for International Development (DFID, UK), Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD), Government of the Netherlands, The Soros Documentary Fund.

Contact

Don Edkins
Director
STEPS Southern Africa

P.O. Box 21545
Kloof Street 8008

Cape Town
South Africa
Tel: 27 21 465 5805
Fax: 27 21 465 5806


Iikka Vehkalahti
Executive Producer
YLE/Finnish Broadcasting Co

P.O.Box 196

Tampere
33101
Finland
Tel: 358 3 3456 111


Placed on the Communication Initiative site November 21 2003
Last Updated January 24 2008



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This is highly informative piece of information because it gives one ideas how to educate the communities about HIV/AIDs creatively. It would be great to have copies of these films.

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