The Greatest Silence: Rape in the Congo

Rank

Middle 40-60% of all time (see others with this rank)

Festival Year

2008 (click here to see all competition films from this year)

Category

Documentary Competition

Non-Cast Credits

Lisa F. Jackson, Sheila Nevins, Diana Barrett, Alexandra Lescaze, Jennifer Ollman, Lisa Shreve

Description

Womens bodies have always been a wartime battleground. But on the eastern borders of the Democratic Republic of Congo, where civil war has left four million dead since 1998, rape is happening on a systemic, unimaginable scale. Documentarian Lisa Jackson brings her compassionate camera into the eye of the storm to help break the silence surrounding the sexual torture of hundreds of thousands of women.

Jacksons frank conversations with activists, doctors, peacekeepers, and the rapists themselves paint a sordid picture where rape is a key destabilizing method in a corrupt cycle involving illegal profiteering from coltan (the ore used in cell phones and laptops), which in turn funds militia groups. Compound this with ingrained beliefs in male superiority, and the fact that the sex-crimes police force is literally one woman, and you have the makings of catastrophe. Jacksons meetings with rape victims produce wrenching testimonies of unthinkable mutilation and shaming. Yet amidst dehumanization, the women impossibly exhibit courage and grace and create support systems.

As Jackson shares her own gang-rape story, were potently reminded that in America were in no position to point fingers. The monstrous escalation of rape in the Congo doesn't exist in a vacuum; around the world, human beings perpetrate new heights of barbarity--against the planet and themselves. As a Congolese police woman puts it, He who rapes a woman rapes an entire nation.

Reviewer

Caroline Libresco (see other films reviewed by the same reviewer)

Deconstructing Sundance | Abusing Statistics Since 2006