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| DARFUR'S SMALLEST WITNESSES | |
September 27, 2005 | |
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An exhibition of drawings by
children in Darfur, Sudan collected by a human rights researcher reflect
the violence of the war-torn region. |
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DR. ANNIE SPARROW: It actually looks as if it's a picture of men dancing with women. But the men in the green are Sudanese soldiers taking the women away to be raped.
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| Visual images of violence | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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JEFFREY BROWN: The drawings have been collected into an exhibition called "The Smallest Witnesses: The Conflict in Darfur Through Children's Eyes," recently at New York University, soon to travel around the country.
Sparrow describe one particularly haunting picture done by an eight-year-old girl. DR. ANNIE SPARROW: There's a green vehicle in the middle of the drawing. There's a green man, and there's what looks like an explosive pretty flower. And I said, "What is this?" And she said, "That's my hut burning after it's been hit by a bomb." And I pointed to the man in green, and she said, "That's a soldier from Sudan." And I pointed to the green vehicle, and she said, "That's a tank." And then I pointed to this woman with a red face -- JEFFREY BROWN: It was upside down. DR. ANNIE SPARROW: It was upside down. And I said, "What is this?" And she said, "That's a woman. She's dead." And I said, "Why does she have a red face?" And this little eight-year-old girl said, "Because she was shot in the face," which was just so shocking. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Government's role in the crisis | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Most of the violence has been carried out by marauding bands of Arab militias against African tribes. The Sudanese government has been accused of aiding the militias with military aircraft and other equipment. Sparrow says the drawings make the connection clear.
JEFFREY BROWN: They were up close? DR. ANNIE SPARROW: Very up close.
DR. ANNIE SPARROW: She pointed to the man at the bottom of the picture and she said, "That's a Janjaweed. He's running after us. They're all running after us. And we're holding on to each other and running and screaming." The saddest bit for that was, she said, "even though we're all hanging on to each other," she said, "my daddy -- my daddy was lost." And they don't even know to this day whether he's alive or not because they're in Chad in a refugee camp and he could be anywhere. |
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| Reflections of peace and dreams | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| JEFFREY BROWN: Among the terrible images, there are some that evoke a more peaceful time.
DR. ANNIE SPARROW: It's a very beautiful bird. And they do draw these pictures of beautiful birds and their home life, and they also draw pictures of almost what they were wishing for. JEFFREY BROWN: In this drawing, a girl has books floating over the head of her brother. She told Sparrow he desperately wants to go to school.
JEFFREY BROWN: Dr. Sparrow says that for the children of Darfur, creating the drawings has a therapeutic effect. For the rest of us, the works offer a window into their troubled world. JIM LEHRER: The exhibition is now at the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles; it travels next to Toronto. |
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