Gandhi's Children

Documentaire
    Réalisé par David MacDougall • Écrit par David MacDougall
    Australie • 2008 • 185 minutes • Vidéo • Couleur
  • N° ISAN :
    ISAN 0000-0005-1940-0000-N-0000-0000-5
Résumé

Dans un des quartiers les plus pauvres de New Delhi, un bâtiment monolithique aux allures de prison. C’est le "Praya’s Children House" qui accueille 350 garçons. Ils sont orphelins, ont été abandonnés ou ont fugué. Près de la moitié sont des délinquants mineurs sous contrôle judiciaire. David MacDougall a suivi pendant plusieurs mois la routine de ce foyer d’accueil s’attachant plus spécialement à quelques garçons. Malgré la dureté de leur vie, beaucoup font preuve d’une remarquable force de caractère et d’un formidable appétit de vivre. Un jour, 181 garçons travaillant dans une usine de broderie sont amenés, ajoutant une pression supplémentaire sur l’équipement délabré de l’institution qui fait ce qu’elle peut ? Mais, est-ce assez ?

Gandhi’s Children chronicles the life of children in what the filmmaker calls "the exact opposite of Doon", a shelter for orphans and juvenile detainees run by an Indian non-governmental organization. The Prayas Children's Home for Boys is located on the northern fringe of New Delhi in Jahangirpuri, a resettlement colony whose residents were moved from inner-city slums several decades ago. It is still one of the poorest quarters of the city. The home was built in 1993, but its facilities are already deteriorating. There is broken plumbing, defective lighting, and other problems. The boys live in dormitories ranged around two central courtyards.
The home provides food and shelter for 350 boys. Some are orphans, some have been abandoned, others have run away from home. About half were picked up from the streets for minor crimes and are held under a court order. Living in the institution for several months, MacDougall explores its routines and the varied experiences of individual boys, including one who had been abducted from his family, one who was a seasoned street-dweller, another who was a pickpocket, and another who had been separated from his family during a fire in his slum area.
Despite the harshness of their lives, many of the boys show remarkable strength of character, knowledge, and resilience. Often left to their own devices, they institute a seemingly arbitrary set of checks and balances to make sense of the chaos around them. Then one day 181 new boys arrive, having been "rescued" in police raids from sordid child-labor factories. The new children place additional strains on Prayas's already deteriorating facilities. The institution does what it can, but is it enough.

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