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Somali love story sweeps contest for top African film prize

TriceEdneyWire.com/Global Information Network | 11/4/2021, 6 p.m.
A Finish-Somali filmmaker has scooped the grand prize at the Pan-African film festival known as FESPACO in Burkina Faso.
Scene from “The Gravedigger’s Wife”

A Finish-Somali filmmaker has scooped the grand prize at the Pan-African film festival known as FESPACO in Burkina Faso. The head of the prize jury called the winning feature a courageous film.

Director Khadar Ahmed’s film, “The Gravedigger’s Wife,” explores what people will do for love. It focuses on Guled, whose job it is to wait outside the hospital to bury the dead, and what he does to save his sick wife.

“It is a beautiful film that tells a story with humanity,” Mauritanian film director Abderrahmane Sissako stated.

Set in Djibouti, it details the struggles faced by Guled, played by Omar Abdi, when he learns he has to raise funds to pay for his wife’s treatment.

His wife, Nasra, played by Yasmin Warsame, is dying of kidney failure.

Ironically, as a gravedigger, Guled waits for the deaths of others in order to make the money that could mean his wife survives.

Mr.Ahmed wanted to “tell this story with dignity, tenderness and compassion—all the qualities I’ve been raised with,” the director told the Guardian newspaper.

Mr. Ahmed was born in Somalia but moved to Finland as a teenager.

“I’m in awe. I’m speechless. Words cannot express my gratitude and appreciation for this type of love from the continent,” Mr. Ahmed wrote on Instagram.

A rare, feature-length film in Somali, “The Gravedigger’s Wife” is also Somalia’s first entry in the Best International Feature Film category for the Academy Awards in the United States.

His film was 10 years in the making. Mr. Ahmed wrote it a decade ago, but was determined to direct it himself and so had to learn how to be a director, the Guardian reports.

As well as winning the prestigious award at FESPACO, known as the Golden Stallion of Yennenga, Mr. Ahmed also received $36,000 in prize money.

The Silver Stallion went to Haitian director Gessica Geneus for her film “Freda.” And the Bronze Stallion went to Tunisian director Leyla Bouzid for “Tale of Love and Desire.”

The prizes were handed out at FESPACO’s closing ceremony in the Burkinabe capital, Ouagadougou.

This was the 27th edition of the weeklong biennial event, the continent’s biggest film festival that celebrates films largely produced in Africa by Africans.