(RESEARCH ABOUT DOCUMENTARY)

                       RESEARCH ABOUT DOCUMENTARY

In this documentary, I am highlighting an area that is very backward. The people of this area do not have any basic living facilities. But in this documentary I have highlighted their two main problems one is pure drinking water and another is transportation. 

Research

All of my research is based on direct relationships with the people in the area.


It is a very backward and peninsular area, I first came to this area during the last election. And since then I`ve had a lots of visits to this area. And because of that I know a lot about the problems in this area. There area a lot of problems in this area but two main problems are pure drinking and transportation. And I am highlighting these two problems in this documentary. I have talked to the people of this area many times about these two issues. And whenever I have visited the area, I have seen locals struggling to get clean drinking water to their homes.

And that`s why I`ve included in this documentary some people from three different families in the area which will explain these two issues in details. Out of these families, I have selected three different characters and I will take interview of these characters and they tell about the difficulties they are facing on a daily basis. 

Inspiration 

There are some documentaries that inspired me to highlight the following issues of the area and encourage me to work on this type of documentary.

1) The City With No Water.


Karachi, ​Pakistan, a ​City with No ​Water - Short ​Documentary by ​Unreported ​World ​

The City with ​no water: ​Imagine having ​to spend half ​your salary or ​more buying ​water, ​sometimes only ​available ​illegally from ​criminals. Or ​if water taps ​in your area ​only ran once a ​fortnight in ​the middle of ​the night for ​less than two ​hours. ​

That was the ​situation for ​millions in the ​city of Karachi,​ Pakistan back ​in 2016, where ​climate change ​and mismanagement ​saw the supply ​of water ​drastically ​reduced. ​Ordinary ​families were ​the hardest hit ​as Fazeelat ​Aslam reported. ​

Source: Unreported World



2) The Spring - The Charity: water story.


The Spring is a passionate and determined group of monthly givers on a mission to end the water crisis in our lifetime. People like you, from more than 100 countries around the world, giving anything they can to prove how unstoppable we are when we work together. 

The Spring

When former nightclub promoter Scott Harrison founded charity: water in 2006, he set out to end the water crisis in his lifetime. Ten years later, a passionate and determined group of monthly givers joined him in that mission. This is our story.



3) Life without Clean Water.



In Episode 2, meet Tarik Haftay, one of many young girls who puts in hours each day walking to collect dirty water for her family. Spend a day walking in her shoes. Learn more at http://cwtr.org/2jmAZ38

The Journey is a video series that shows charity: water supporters how their donations get put to work in the field.

Music licensed through: The Music Bed
Sound mixing: Claymore Pictures

Clean water changes everything. charity: water brings clean and safe drinking water to people in need around the world, improving health, education, and opportunity – especially for women and children. Learn more about the charity: water story here: http://cwtr.org/2btdilD.

Please share the video, and join The Spring today: http://cwtr.org/2btdilD



4) Saving Faces.

Every year in Pakistan, at least 100 people are victimized by acid attacks. The majority of these are women, and many cases go unreported. With little or no access to reconstructive surgery, survivors are physically and emotionally scarred, while many reported assailants — typically a husband or someone close to the victim — are let go with minimal punishment from the state. Saving Face tells the stories of two acid-attack survivors: Zakia, a 39-yearold whose husband threw acid on her after she filed for divorce, and Rukhsana, a 25-year-old whose husband and inlaws threw acid and gasoline on her, then set her on fire. Charting the arduous attempts to bring their assailants to justice, the film also follows plastic surgeon Dr. Mohammad Jawad, who put his London practice on hold to return to his home country to help Zakia, Rukhsana and other victims.

Directed by Oscar and Emmy-nominated filmmaker Daniel Junge and Emmy-winning Pakistani director Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, Saving Face is a powerful look inside Pakistani society, illuminating each women’s personal journey while showing how reformers are tackling this vexing problem though the passage of a new law that punishes convicted acid attackers with life imprisonment. 




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