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Favela Rising: a Brazilian Story of Hope Inspires the World PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jeff Zimbalist   
Friday, 21 April 2006 17:26

Favela Rising, the movie on Rio's shantytownMy close friend and co-filmmaker Matt Mochary called me on the phone from a favela (shantytown) in Brazil. He told me to pack my bags because he'd found the story we'd been searching for. A week earlier, I'd sat with Matt at a Mexican bar in Bushwick, Brooklyn, and expressed my wish for more nonfiction stories in the news, television, and theaters about communities that succeed, that overcome great adversity, that unite and reach and achieve. In short - communities that work.

It seems most people's image of global harmony or disharmony is predominantly shaped by the media. When I find myself surrounded by stories of the world falling apart, naturally I imagine the world as a place falling apart.

The more access I have to stories of communities that work, the more I imagine a world in which people are also realizing change and breaking the odds stacked against them. I am attracted to these vital and inspiring stories because it is in them that I find myself the most activated and alive.

On the phone, Matt told me of a chance meeting with the two leaders of a movement in the slums of Rio called AfroReggae. Here were a couple of broken individuals infected with idealism, eager for any chance to represent themselves, to share their winning prescription.

I quit my job teaching editing and 10 days later was with Matt in Vigário Geral, Rio's most violent slum. Across the table from us sat José Junior and Anderson Sá.

Over the next couple years Matt and I made many trips back to live in the favela with Anderson and Junior. We had taught youth from AfroReggae and a group called Nos do Cinema how to shoot with some of our DV equipment and would sometimes leave cameras with the children when we returned to New York.

The idea was to encourage self-representation, to empower the youth using the same inside-out model of third world development preached and practiced by the AfroReggae movement itself. What was achieved was unique access to some of the more violent episodes of the favela and some of the most visceral and authentic scenes in the film.

On one of my trips I found myself driving to the emergency room at a beat down public hospital in Rio after getting the call that Anderson had a freak accident and was paralyzed from the neck down.

Anderson was a good friend by this point, and it was devastating to see him in full body traction, unable to move, in a room overcrowded with gunplay victims and the nearly dead.

In a faint whisper, Anderson told us to film him. He told us this was the truth, this was part of his story. Just as suddenly as a man finds himself unable to move below his neck, Matt and my film had unexpectedly shifted.

What had started as a more general investigation into the AfroReggae movement and the horrors of the favela had become the story of one man's fight to overcome. As Anderson faced the biggest obstacle of his life, a vast favela community held its breath, praying for a miracle to resurrect their leader.

Favela Rising celebrates the strength of the human spirit to assert itself in the face of human rights violations, social injustice, and unexpected adversity.

Chronicling the rise to greatness of the AfroReggae movement, the film shows how the music and culture of Brazil's underclass transform into a catalyst for grassroots social-change.

But most of all, Favela Rising is the story of a community that works. The success of the film should be judged on how well it serves to activate its viewers; how well it inspires action.

Jeff Zimbalist is co-director of Favela Rising

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From the Favela Rising website:

Favela Rising documents a man and a movement, a city divided and a favela (Brazilian squatter settlement) united. Haunted by the murders of his family and many of his friends, Anderson Sá is a former drug-trafficker who turns social revolutionary in Rio de Janeiro's most feared slum.

Through hip-hop music, the rhythms of the street, and Afro-Brazilian dance he rallies his community to counteract the violent oppression enforced by teenage drug armies and sustained by corrupt police.

At the dawn of liberation, just as collective mobility is overcoming all odds and Anderson's grassroots Afro Reggae movement is at the height of its success, a tragic accident threatens to silence the movement forever.

--------------

Director Zimbalist

Jeff Zimbalist is an award-winning director and editor whose numerous documentary films have been broadcast on HBO, PBS, Women's Entertainment Television, Cinemax and various news programs. Among the many film festival awards Jeff has won is Best New Director at the Tribeca Film Festival.

Jeff's work has been featured at the Museum of the Moving Image in New York, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, and The Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. He has produced educational and promotional films for over a dozen clients throughout the United States, in South Asia, and in Latin America.

A Massachusetts Council of the Arts fellow, Jeff has also shot, directed, and edited a variety of fiction films and has provided media consulting services to the UNDP and various international nonprofit service organizations.

Currently, Jeff is a faculty member at both the New York Film Academy and the Maine Photographic Workshops. His latest film Favela Rising is being released by THINKfilm and HBO/Cinemax Films.

Matt Mochary - Director / Producer / Co-Cinematographer
 
Matt is a new filmmaker. Favela Rising is his first piece of co-direction and production. Before Favela Rising, Matt was a Partner at Spectrum Equity Investors, the founder and Chairman of Totality Corporation, the Chairman of AEKus Properties, and the founder of The Mochary Foundation, a charitable organization that promotes public education, www.mochary.org. Matt received his BA from Yale University and his MBA from Kellogg at Northwestern University.

About AfroReggae

Born out of desire to counteract the violent drug industry and police oppression in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Grupo Cultural AfroReggae - GCAR ("AfroReggae Cultural Group") was formed in January 1993, initially around AfroReggae Notícias (AfroReggae News), a newspaper designed to add value and disseminate black culture.

The newspaper primarily targeted young people interested in reggae, soul, and hip-hop, among other musical genres. The group soon thereafter opened its first Núcleo Comunitário de Cultura ("Culture Community Center") in the Vigário Geral favela (a slum area) in 1993.

In a short period of time, this center was offering its first workshops - dance, percussion, garbage recycling, soccer and capoeira - the foundations for new social projects.

GCAR knew exactly what it was seeking with its programs: to offer a cultural and artistic education for adolescents living in slums. By affording local youth more chances of strengthening their citizenship, GCAR hoped to provide a viable path away from entanglement in the prevalent drug trade.

In 1997, AfroReggae opened Centro Cultural AfroReggae Vigário Legal ("Vigário Legal AfroReggae Cultural Center"), a landmark in its history. With structured facilities within the community, they were able to enhance the quality of their programs and transform the initiative into a reference point for social and cultural practices in the city of Rio de Janeiro.

In conjunction with workshops in music, capoeira, theater, hip hop and dance, Vigário also became the home for the "Criança Legal" project, designed to give support to preschool kids through programs aimed at socializing and literacy.

Participant children's parents also take part in weekly meetings where subjects such as domestic violence and personal hygiene are discussed; they also receive basic-food baskets.

Of all activities offered, music has been the major driver in attracting teenagers to participate in GCAR. The success attained by Banda AfroReggae, both in artistic terms and as a social-project model, has attracted other teenagers who want to follow this same path.

Today there are three other bands that have also been making public presentations: Banda Makala Música e Dança, Afro Lata and Afro Samba. There are also subgroups: Afro Mangue, Tribo Negra, Akoni and Kitôto.

Additional Projects

AfroReggae implemented the "Rompendo Fronteiras" ("Breaking Barriers") project in October 2001 in Parada de Lucas, a slum next to Vigário Geral, where drug gangs have been fighting since 1985. This program was designed to fight against poverty and violence through educational programs including basic IT/computer courses.

In the Cantagalo-Pavão-Pavãozinho slum, GCAR makes use of circus arts, such as juggling and acrobatics programs, to encourage social activity and self-confidence for teenagers. Since 1996, this community has also had a circus workshop at Ciep de Ipanema's amphitheater. Through these projects, GCAR created Trupe Levantando a Lona, which makes public presentations and helps students become professional artists.

In February 2002, GCAR began offering workshops through which teenagers are offered courses in the production of documentaries. The intent is to establish an audiovisual center where the students can work together with a professional team.

In the Cidade de Deus slum, AfroReggae formed a partnership with Casa de Santa Ana, which provides services to the elderly. The project there is the choir "Coral de Idosos," which works together with the percussion band Banda Makala (former Banda AfroReggae II), and involves both teenagers and the elderly.

Other programs are: Programa de Comunicação ("Communication Program"), comprised of AfroReggae Notícias ARN (AfroReggae News) newspaper; the radio programs AfroRitmia and Baticum, broadcast through Viva Rio AM 1180 KHZ and through the portal Viva Favela; the AfroReggae.org site, intended to become an Internet portal where people can find information about GCAR and about the Afro-Brazilian culture; and finally, AfroNet, a service through which fact sheets are sent via e-mail, to all people involved in any of our activities, events and initiatives.

Programa de Saúde (Health Program) is conducted by Trupe da Saúde, a theatrical group comprised of adolescents from Vigário Geral, which makes use of circus-like presentations to provide important healthcare tips to underprivileged communities; Barraca da Saúde, which distributes information papers about STDs/AIDS, hygiene, diseases in general, breast feeding, baby care and condoms in Morro do Cantagalo and Lapa, and in GCAR's events; and Kizumba, a fact sheet prepared by GCAR to announce health program-related subjects.

AfroReggae also established an arts production company - ARPA, Afro Reggae Produções Artísticas - to give support to the professional careers of subgroups formed as a result of its social projects, especially Banda AfroReggae, and to contribute with the NGO, since almost 30% of funds raised with the events are invested in GCAR.

AfroReggae has been conducting initiatives designed to invest in the potential of underprivileged teenagers, taking education, culture and art to places marked by violence and the drug trade. The movement is actively working to bridge the gap between white and black people, between the rich and the poor.

Vigário was GCAR's first experience. Thanks to the encouragement and self-esteem of those living in the slums, known nationwide for its violence, this community is now recognized as an artistic and culture-generating center. GCAR hopes that its programs in Parada de Lucas, Cidade de Deus, Cantagalo, and Pavão-Pavãozinho will be equally successful.

Favela Rising - www.favelarising.com

Grupo Cultural AfroReggae in Portuguese - www.afroreggae.org.br

Comments (17)Add Comment
Sweeping statements...
written by Guest, April 22, 2006
"Vigário Geral, Rio's most violent slum..."

Oh really? On what evidence is this based???
SF Film Festival
written by Guest, April 22, 2006
This film will be screened on April 29 and May 1 at the San Francisco International Film Festival. See http://fest06.sffs.org/films/f....php?id=29
Good Film . . .
written by Guest, April 23, 2006
Favela Rising is a very interesting and inspiring film. I saw it at a film festival last October. Worth checking out, although there aren't as many scenes of AfroReggae playing live as I would've liked. It's more about the people and the movement than the actual music. Still, I enjoyed it immensely and would recommend seeing it if you have the chance.
...
written by Guest, April 23, 2006
"VG, Rio's most violent slum..."
A slightly nauseating tag that seems to have followed 'Favela Rising' around the globe. But I suppose such hype has to be expected, as they are trying to sell the film to cinema-goers all over the world.
I thought Mochary and Zimbalist did a very competent job with 'Favela Rising'...nothing more. The favela's resurgence (not to mention the protagonist's own 'return from the dead') is an incredible story that really speaks for itself in my opinion. With such an amazing tale to work with, Mochary and Zimbalist would have found it very difficult to make a bad film. But hey, well done to them for bringing more attention to the work of GCAR...
For all of us...
written by Guest, April 25, 2006
Think about the generations… Our Children and our children’s children so that they know it’s a better world for them!
...
written by Guest, April 29, 2006
ROCINHA.... SLeep there one night...
yomama
written by Guest, May 09, 2006
this site sucks ass
Jeff
written by Guest, May 13, 2006
Nobody likes favelas. They are ugly dirty and poor. No Brazilian likes favelas. But they still exist and in a way this good because foreigners can write about them, visit them, make films about them and , most interesting, make money on them...
There are lots of things to talk about, write about and film in Brazil, but you are interested on... guess what?
Disgusting...
violence, IBISS and the money
written by Guest, May 14, 2006
About the violence...not every favela is dangerous, mostly it just depents on the time, place in the favela and the gang who's in charge. Like Rochina, lower part is ok, but upstairs...VG has a Gaza-strip...almost nobody can or want to walk there.

About IBISS, www.ibiss.com.br, why is it not mentioned it here? If I'm right, the NGO of AfroReggae works mainly together with them.

And about the money all the people wanna make about movies of favelas...hey, you can see it the other way: it's easier to make a nature film of brazil then a movie about life in a favela. It's your choice to watch...some people are interested and don't have a clue about what is going on in a favelas. 'See no evil, hear no evil' is a common thought in Rio Sul...
Jasper
...
written by Guest, May 22, 2006
Saw the film here in Thessaloniki and was truly inspired. A story of strength - of minds and of music. My only concern was a lack of Jose Perreira (Junior), who, upon reading more about AfroReggae, I realized is one man who deserves more attention in the film than he received.
A side note about a couple of the comments posted here: what is the deal with all the negativity? I didn't think it was possible to write such cynical views about such a movement, a people, and a film that has brought well-deserved attention to them. Negativity will get us nowhere.....The world needs more people like Junior and Anderson and the youth that make up Grupo Cultural Afro Reggae - this is indisp**able.

Peace.
Favelas
written by Guest, May 24, 2006
Favelas to many people see only negative, like many things..there is always positive stuff too but this does not sell. Not all life in Favelas is bad. Maybe poor but not poor like in some parts of the world like Africa or India.
We need to see the positive things not just negative stuff.

Funkeiro Da Rocinha
Funkeiro, listen.
written by Guest, May 26, 2006
It is indisp**able there is positive stuff in favelas. The point is that favelas are an aberration in a city. They should not exist. People who live in favelas should have a chance to own decent houses and live confortably. Politicians never talk about eradicating favelas.
They are the first ones we should blame and put pressure on.
I´m Brazilian, I love Brazil.
And, I will be happier the day every person who now live in a favela will have a nice decent place to live in.
On that day stupid foreigners who are so eager to come, visit
and babble about favelas will have to do it in the slums of their native cities .
ringtones free
written by Guest, June 07, 2006
Legiao da Boa Vista
written by Guest, June 16, 2006
I haven't seen the film yet, but I want to. It sounds great. I would also like to see a movie about the church of Legiao da Boa Vista and its good works there.
What about showing this film in Brazil?
written by Mateus Justino, July 01, 2006
I went to the site and saw that you guys are doing a U.S. tour. Do you have any plans of actually showing it here (Brazil) and if you don't, then you should put it up on the web and make it available through bit torrents.
anderson sa
written by paul donnachie, January 24, 2007
I juts saw the film on UK television. What it showed is that Anderson sa is a really inspirational man. he has given hope to people whose situation most of us cant understand. he has also confirmed how music can be a positive force for change. respect!
FREE 'Favela Rising' outdoor screening Aug. 16, with samba lessons!
written by Ardi, July 27, 2007
An outdoor samba celebration and screening of the critically acclaimed documentary, 'Favela Rising,' winner of numerous awards including Best New Documentary Filmmaker at the Tribeca Film Festival. The film tells an inspiring story of Afro-Reggae star, Anderson Sa, who uses hip-hop music and afro-Brazilian dance to rally his community against oppressive drug armies and corrupt police in Rio de Janeiro's most violent favela.
The evening will start will a session of Samba lessons by Quenia Ribero of the world-renowned Ailey School, the official school of the Alvin Ailey National Dance Theater. Now one of Brazil's most popular exports, samba started as the musical force for social change of its day, originating from slave communities and incubated in poor neighborhoods, called favelas. The lessons will be followed with a dance party, providing attendees with a rare opportunity to dance to live samba, followed by the screening of 'Favela Rising.'
The outdoor event takes place August 16, from 7:00pm to 10:30pm (7:00-7:50: Samba Instruction, 8:00-8:30: Dance Party to Live Samba, 8:35-10:00: Film Presentation of 'Favela Rising') at Hamilton Lawn, 116th St. and Amsterdam Ave (Take the 1 or 9 to 116th St). Admission is Free.

Creative Counsel is a New York-based group that connects the arts & entertainment world to causes that matter. Throughout the year, CC showcases the work of filmmakers, musicians, and other artists as they take stands on issues such as social equality, sustainability, and the importance of community. For more information visit www.leadcreatively.org . This event is presented in partner ship with Columbia University's "Shall we Dance?" program.

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