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GUINEA - Video Sabou et NafaProject Update
La Cellule de Coordination Sur Les Pratiques Traditionelles Affectant La Sante des Femmes et des Enfants, known as CPTAFE, is the leading organization working to end female genital mutilation (FGM) in Guinea. Established in 1984 as the Guinean affiliate of the Inter-African Committee for the Prevention of Harmful Traditional Practices, CPTAFE has active branches in each of the country's four regions. CPTAFE's members and local volunteers include teachers, health professionals, rural radio journalists, and a diverse range of other community-based supporters. While focused on the fight against FGM - a deeply ingrained cultural practice that is nearly universal in this West African nation - CPTAFE is also committed to supporting positive traditional practices, promoting girls' education, and spreading information on STD/AIDS prevention. The cumulative effect of CPTAFE's anti-FGM outreach efforts has been highlighted by public dépots de couteaux over the past two and a half years in which excisors in the prefectures of Karoussa, Kerouané and Mamou and the capital, Conakry, laid down their knives, renouncing the practice. [Read more about CPTAFE in Guinea newspaper accounts.] Project Implementation In the view of CPTAFE Secretary General Dr. Morissanda Kouyaté, Guinea is at a critical juncture regarding FGM. Awareness of the detrimental effects of the practice is widening; further, as the successive dépots de couteaux have shown, the possibility exists for consensual, communal change. Participatory video offers a lively means of strengthening outreach efforts, amplifying the effect of recent achievements, and supporting long-term behavior change through the dissemination of positive models. Together, CPTAFE and C4C developed a two-phase plan to equip and train five regional participatory video teams: one for each of the country's four geographical regions and one for the capital, Conakry. The goal of the project is to support CPTAFE's anti-FGM mission and to promote the welfare of women, girls and youth through use of community-based communication activities.
Subsequently, participants separated into their 7-person regional teams. The two teams from the interior returned to Middle and Upper Guinea with their video equipment (a super-VHS camcorder, microphones, headsets, a small TV/monitor for field use, a VCR, a full-sized TV/monitor, a small generator, video tape supplies and accessories). Each regional team was accompanied by two members of the Conakry team and a C4C video trainer. Video activities subsequently continued in the two interior regions over the course of eight days, with participants engaging community members in collaborative video productions, ranging from mini-dramas to documentaries incorporating poetry and musical performances. Each team produced three videotapes and conducted three community "playbacks" followed by team-facilitated discussions.
In Upper Guinea, by contrast, team members filmed two short dramas intended to persuade family members to abandon FGM. The scripts were based on the first-hand knowledge of team members; the actors included friends and relatives, as well as health personnel and former excisors. In one drama, a grandmother is determined to have her granddaughter excised during the period of summer vacation - an all-too-realistic scenario, based on the actual experience of one young team member. Eventually, the grandmother is convinced by trusted peers that excision poses a threat to her granddaughter's well-being. Local playbacks sparked appreciative comments on the clarity of the anti-FGM information delivered in the video, as well as on the presence of a widely respected community figure in the role of the grandmother who finally renounces the practice. Positive modelling, both on-screen and off, proved a powerful ingredient in the receptiveness of community members to the video teams' messages. The community playbacks elicited many highly personal comments from viewers. In Dalaba, one man spoke of the death of his young niece following her excision. A woman described the problems she has experienced with a vesico-vaginal fistula. In Kankan, Upper Guinea, one young woman stood and said that she wished she could restore what had been taken from her when she was excised. One mother expressed deep regret at having excised her daughter; another woman stated, "We were victims, but our daughters won't be." During each playback session, the video teams invited community members' ideas for future videotapes, as well as for outreach activities that could advance CPTAFE's mission and promote community welfare.
In addition to the anti-FGM videos that were produced during this time, the Upper Guinea team also made a program on various income-generating projects initiated by local women, underscoring the social and economic benefits that resulted for both the individual women and the community. The name Video Sabou et Nafa was chosen by project participants through consensus. The words sabou and nafa are shared by all three of the key languages spoken by team members - Malinke, Poular and Soussou - and signify, respectively, "opportunity" and "benefit." The title reflects the many opportunities enabled through use of local video, and the beneficial changes this resource can help bring to communities throughout Guinea. In the project's next phase, the video teams gathered for a follow-up workshop and training of trainers activities; designated participants then trained new video teams in the Lower and Forest regions of the country. In December 2004, members of all of the community video teams met in Conakry to exchange experiences of the past year, screen their recent work, and reflect on the project’s effect on their lives and communities. Since the project’s start, the teams have made over 30 local-language videotapes on topics including family planning, girls’ education, infant nutrition, teen pregnancy and early marriage as well as FGM. In addition, a Video Sabou et Nafa team produced a documentary for the American Refugee Committee on gender-based violence prevention, response and legal aid activities benefiting refugee women in the Forest Region. This videotape was shown during a U.S. Congressional briefing on gender violence in conflict settings.
Priority themes for the teams’ current action plans include children’s rights, prevention of HIV/AIDS, and different forms of violence against women.
The Video Sabou et Nafa Project has been funded by the Public Welfare Foundation, the Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund, the American Jewish World Service, UNFPA/Guinea and USAID. |
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