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BBC - You can’t afford not to take sides

September 18th, 2007 by italker

bulgarias_children_lead.jpg

I can’t get the documentary I saw last Thursday on BBC4 out of my mind. the blurb on the BBCs web page reads as follows;
“It was entitled BULGARIA’S ABANDONED CHILDREN. in the programme, Director Kate Blewett visits a children’s care home in Bulgaria and investigates the conditions in which the children live.

The Social Care Home - where 75 unwanted children are growing up - is the main employer in the small village of Mogilino. Few of the children can talk, not necessarily because they are unable but rather because no one has ever taught them how.

Kate meets the children in this tragic, silent world, such as Milan, the gentle giant who spends his days doing chores and watching over the others, and mildly autistic 18-year-old Didi, who is able to talk, and has plenty to say, but no one to speak to. The children that surround them suffer a variety of problems, many are blind or deaf and some are unable to leave their beds, many are literally wasting away.”

I found this whole documentary disturbing at a whole lot of levels. I didn’t want to watch it all because by watching it somehow I feel responsible. There is a part of me that says I’d rather not know. The other thing was, the pictures and images where so shamefully distressing that one wonders how any human being could set up their film crew and go round the home without literally getting involved. I was hearted to see that Kate Blewett and her production team had written to the Bulgarian Embassy to try and get some response. You can read the reply on the BBC web page. The other thing that gave me great confidence to believe that their is a great wave of compassion seeking to break over the UK was the number of comments left on the Beebs web page. So many people looking for direction where they might help. The other thing I found quite frustrating was the official stance of the BBC to the programme. they pointed out that the BBC in order to maintain its neutrality could not enter into any lobbying role. Got me thinking how can you take your camera’s to a place like Mogilino, make a film about injustice and then sit on the fence. Well I suppose the fact is that we all do our fair share of sitting on that fence. You’d think by now it would have collapsed.

Posted in Global Issue, Politics | 1 Comment »