South African Documentary BUDDHA IN AFRICA to World Premiere at Hot Docs

Buddha in Africa
Buddha in Africa

The documentary, Buddha in Africa by South African filmmaker, Nicole Schafer, will World Premiere at the 2019 Hot Docs Canadian International Festival taking place April 25 to May 5. The film will be presented in competition in the International Spectrum program. The winner of the Hot Docs Best International Feature Documentary Award will qualify for consideration for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.

Buddha in Africa follows the personal story of a teenager growing up in a Chinese Buddhist orphanage in Malawi and the challenges he faces between his African roots and Chinese upbringing. Against the backdrop of China’s global rise, the film provides a unique insight into Chinese soft power in Africa.

“When I first came across this story, I was struck by how this orphanage was strangely reminiscent of the Christian missions during the colonial era;” says writer and director Nicole Schafer, “Only here African children have Chinese names and instead of learning about the West, they were learning about Chinese culture and history. I felt the orphanage would be the perfect metaphor to explore not only the impact of Chinese involvement in Africa, but also as a mirror for the legacy of Western colonialism that still exists on the African continent.”

Buddha in Africa

“Buddha in Africa offers a new and unexpected insight into China’s presence in Africa through the lens of the Buddhist temple Amitofo Care Centre in Malawi,” explains co-producer, David Herdies of Momento Film. “It’s an interesting way to look at this new type of colonisation that is going on, but in a non-judgmental and human way.”

In 2018, Buddha in Africa was selected to participate in the Cape Town International Film Festival and Market Works-in-Progress lab. It received the highest award, combining two weeks of Online by Monk and two weeks of Grading at Priest Post with the following motivation: “For its unique subject and its meticulous patient development, for the crossroad of important themes, and for the different worlds that have overlapped and met in tangible captivating characters, the jury chose to give the combined two prizes to the very promising Malawi set film project Buddha in Africa by Nicole Shafer.”

The project received the IDFA Most Promising Documentary Award when it was first pitched at the Durban FilmMart in 2011 and has since been awarded funding from several international funds including the IDFA Bertha Europe Fund in the Netherlands, Hot Docs-Blue Ice Group Doc Fund and the Alter Cine Foundation in Canada, Chicken & Egg Pictures in New York, the South African National Film and Video Foundation and the KwaZulu-Natal Film Commission.

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