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Mongolian film student prepares work on help for Mongolian women and children PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 30 July 2007

ImageA Mongolian student studying film in the United States has returned this summer to create a documentary on domestic violence in Mongolian homes. 

Daria Tsagaan, a student in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California at Berkley, is being sponsored by UC Berkeley's Human Rights Center which has sent 12 graduate students to do similar work throughout the world. 

Daria Tsagaan reported to the local Amnesty International office in Ulaanbaatar where she was given position papers to read. In a report she wrote for the university she said, “I had a feeling that Amnesty International mostly works with policymakers and trainers instead of victims. In order to hear the stories of actual or potential victims of domestic violence, I decided to go to the edge of the city, where the poorest people and the newest migrants from the provinces live.” 

“I began by interviewing the teachers and the principal of a special school at the far west end of the city which deals with kids who don’t go to school regularly. As in any community there are many reasons these children do not attend. That week I concentrated on three kids who lived in extremely violent environments. It was very hard for me to handle hearing all those heart-breaking stories. “If possible, I wish I could make all alcohol drinks disappear,” said Chinguun, a second grader who is now 15. He didn’t go to school when he was younger because his violent alcoholic relatives always beat him, so he escaped to his herdswoman grandmother’s home. But she lived in a province, isolated and far from schools.” 

“The more I heard people’s stories, the more I felt that I owed them the best possible project. I decided to change my initial plan of making a documentary, which would have mostly concentrated on one central character to reveal other issues while building his or her story. I thought that it might be a better idea to use multi-media tools to process all of the stories and create an interactive website so it might interest many readers worldwide whose interest is on this issue.” 

Daria Tsagaan also sought out interviews with victims of different forms of violence as well as those who had succeeded in life due to help they had received in overcoming their traumas. 

Upon returning to the United States she says it will take two months of editing to put together suitable footage of her interviews. Then she will create her website to publicize the options available to help those Mongolian women and children trapped in abusive homes.
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