The orphan generation : a video about community-based care and support for children orphaned by AIDS / produced by Small World Productions with support from Action Aid Uganda.
Material type:
FilmSeries: Strategies for hopePublication details: [Kampala : Small World Productions, cl992]Description: 1 videocassette of 1 (VHS, PAL) (ca. 50 min.) : sd., col. ; 1/2 inOther title: - Video about community-based care and support for children orphaned by AIDS
- These are our children
- HV961 .077 VIDEO
- Camera, David Baillie; sound, Deborah Kaplan; music, Gregory Theelen; editing, Jan Willem Meurkens (These are our children), Barry van der Sluis (The orphan generation); ; series editor, Glen Williams.
| Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Video
|
AIU/NEGST - Tony Wilmot Memorial Library CD & DVD Cabinet | General Circulation | HV961 .077 VIDEO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | R36366L3232 |
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Source used: catalog card from OvOp field office.
[pt. 1]. These are our children / produced and directed by Jamie Hartzell (10 min.) -- [pt. 2]. The orphan generation / director, Jamie Hartzell ; producer, Carey Newson (40 min.)
Camera, David Baillie; sound, Deborah Kaplan; music, Gregory Theelen; editing, Jan Willem Meurkens (These are our children), Barry van der Sluis (The orphan generation); ; series editor, Glen Williams.
Narrators: Pamela Nomvete (These are our children), Veronica Wilson (The orphan generation).
Part 1 describes what happens to some of the 20,000 Ugandan children orphaned by AIDS in a single year: some of them struggle on alone, others are brought to an orphanage and still others end up on the street. However, with the help of the local and international community an alternative can be provided: to leave them under the care of relatives, or at least of the local community so that they may continue to receive care, support, guidance and above all, love, and may not end up destitute when they grow up. Part 2 shows the alternative at work in one Ugandan village: women's groups, with the support of UCOBAC (Uganda Community-Based Association for Child Welfare) have set up day care centres to look after the children's needs, local artisans teach them a trade, a hospital looks after their medical needs through a mobile clinic and local and international aid organizations pay their school fees. Aid is also provided to the surviving relatives so that the financial burden of looking after the orphans does not become unbearable for them.
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