
Saving Mes Aynak to world premiere at IDFA 2014
We are delighted to announce Saving Mes Aynak has been selected to World Premiere at IDFA (International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam), the world's largest documentary film festival.
We are delighted to announce Saving Mes Aynak has been selected to World Premiere at IDFA (International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam), the world's largest documentary film festival.
Director/producer Brent Huffman and producer Zak Piper will attend the festival, which takes place November 19-30, 2014.
Saving Mes Aynak follows Afghan archaeologist Qadir Temori as he races against time to save a 5,000-year-old archaeological site in Afghanistan from imminent demolition. A Chinese state-owned mining company is closing in on the ancient site, eager to harvest $100 billion dollars worth of copper buried directly beneath the archaeological ruins. Only 10% of Mes Aynak has been excavated, though, and some believe future discoveries at the site have the potential to redefine the history of Afghanistan and the history of Buddhism itself. Qadir Temori and his fellow Afghan archaeologists face what seems an impossible battle against the Chinese, the Taliban and local politics to save their cultural heritage from likely erasure.
The 60 minute film will compete in the IDFA Competition for Mid-Length Documentary.
You can become part of the journey of this film and help save Mes Aynak. Please sign the official petition and consider donating to the film. We plan to resubmit the petition with all the new signatures to the new president of Afghanistan Ashraf Ghani later this year.
Director/producer Brent Huffman, a documentary maker and film professor at Northwestern University, has been independently shooting at the Mes Aynak site in Afghanistan since 2011, and brought the documentary to Kartemquin Films in late 2013 through our KTQ Labs program. The films executive producers are Gordon Quinn, Justine Nagan and Julia Reichert.
Stay tuned to the Saving Mes Aynak website, Facebook and Twitter for more news and upcoming screening details.
Saving Mes Aynak comes to Kartemquin
Undiscovered for 2,000 years, it survived revolution, invasion and war. Now destruction looms again: this is the story of Saving Mes Aynak. Director/producer Brent Huffman has been independently shooting at the Mes Aynak site in Afghanistan since 2011, and has now brought the documentary to Kartemquin Films.
Undiscovered for 2,000 years, it survived revolution, invasion and war. Now destruction looms again: this is the story of Saving Mes Aynak.
Director/producer Brent Huffman, a documentary maker and film professor at Northwestern University, has been independently shooting at the Mes Aynak site in Afghanistan since 2011, and has now brought the documentary to Kartemquin Films.
“As the premiere destination for complex social issue films that intend on making a global impact, Kartemquin is the dream home for Saving Mes Aynak,” said Huffman, who hopes to finish editing and premiere the film by the end of 2014.
In 2007, the Afghanistan government granted copper mining rights at Mes Aynak to the Chinese state-owned China Metallurgical Group Corporation (M.C.C.). Situated in volatile Logar Province, where the Taliban holds considerable power, Mes Aynak is home to one of the world’s largest untapped copper deposits — worth more than $100 billion. Yet the site also houses the astonishing remains of an ancient Buddhist city, which archaeologists are now racing to save. Excavations began in 2009 and have uncovered golden Buddhist statues, dozens of stupas and fragile Buddhist manuscripts buried within temples. Yet perhaps 90 percent of the site remains underground and unseen. To finish the job could take decades. But it is very likely the total destruction of the site for mining will begin later this year, in a tragedy that echoes the notorious destruction of the Buddhas at Bamiyan in 2001. In addition, there is the real danger than the mining will devastate the environment by polluting the land and water supply in Logar province.
“The international team of archaeologists have been racing against time, but they’re only able to save a small fraction of Mes Aynak’s smaller antiquities,” Huffman says. “Its loss is an international tragedy. Being there is like touching history.”
Saving Mes Aynak was one of just 18 documentaries to receive grant funding from the John T. and Catherine D. MacArthur Foundation this year (Kartemquin's In The Game and The Schools Project were also funded in the same round). Other funding has come from smaller grants and a successful Kickstarter campaign.
“We are delighted to bring Brent and his film to Kartemquin,” said Justine Nagan, Kartemquin’s Executive Director. “Its memorable characters and unique narrative has enormous potential to raise awareness around this important issue. Brent has already built a massive online community around Saving Mes Aynak; we aim to help him deliver a film that will galvanize action and bring attention to this unusual problem in war-torn Afghanistan.”
Zak Piper (The Interrupters, Life Itself) has joined the project as Producer, and Kartemquin staffer Matt Lauterbach has signed on as Co-Editor and Post-Production Manager. Julia Reichert (The Lion in the House), Gordon Quinn (Kartemquin Founder & Artistic Director) and Justine Nagan also serve as executive producers.
Brent E. Huffman writes about Mes Aynak for CNN
Director Brent Huffman writes about the plight of Mes Aynak for CNN front page story.
Op-Ed and Video for New York Times
Director Brent Huffman wrote an Op-Ed and made a short video for NY Times Op-Docs about the situation at Mes Aynak that was featured as the lead story on the front page.
Wright State University Newsroom
Wright State grad wins MacArthur grant for documentary on ancient Afghan site. Read more here.
MacArthur Foundation Grant
Saving Mes Aynak has been awarded a MacArthur Foundation Grant.
Northwestern University Professor Receives MacArthur Grant
Medill professor awarded MacArthur grant to document soon-to-be destroyed Mes Aynak. Read more here.
The Temple Trail
A tragedy is set to befall an ancient Afghan Buddhist monument. Read more here.
Medill School of Journalism - For Documentarian, It's Personal
From the Medill School of Journalism's National Security Zone:
Filmmaker Brent E. Huffman risks his life to document an ancient Afghan Buddhist city’s imminent destruction. Read the full interview here.
Wright State University Magazine
Filmmaker in the Spotlight: Brent Huffman. Read about Brent and his upcoming film here.
University of Chicago Diversity School
Erasing the History of Buddhist Afghanistan One Mine at a Time -- Brent E. Huffman. Read more here.
The Diplomat Front Page
Mes Aynak makes front page of The Diplomat: Saving the Buddhas of Mes Aynak.
$35,200 raised on Kickstarter
Director Brent Huffman raised $35,200 through a Kickstarter campaign. 10% of that is being used to purchase new computers and cameras for the Afghan Archaeology Office in Kabul.
UW-Madison archaeologists on the front lines
Protecting Culture From Mines, Wars, Dams and Other Threats. Read more here.
Archaeology Magazine
Salvage Excavations at Buddhist Monastery in Afghanistan. Read about it here.
The Independent in London
Check out the Sunday Edition "Afghanistan's heritage is at stake".