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Thursday 6 March 2014

US Consulate's Niger Delta Legacy Engagement .......The Jeta Amata Connection.



In late 2013, the United States Consulate General in Lagos and the US Department of State’s Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Operations (CSO), decided that they needed to contribute towards reducing the likelihood of conflicts in Nigeria’s oil-rich but violence-prone Niger Delta region. So they launched the Niger Delta Legacy Engagement. Together with a board of distinguished Nigerians, they set for themselves a goal to “reduce the likelihood of mass violence in the Niger Delta in the next two years.”

One of several strategies they adopted was to partner with Nigerians already in the forefront of non-violent civic activism, with the hope that the mentality in the Niger Delta that violence pays will give way to a new narrative of peace and hard work.
That’s where Jeta Amata came in. The Niger Delta Legacy Engagement entered a partnership with the 39-year-old prolific movie director on a very ambitious project which Amata, more than any other director in Nollywood, was more suited to perform. Amata’s records as a professional who consistently made movies that addressed tough, topical and political issues in a compelling way were there for all to see. Amata has production and directing credits in movies like Amazing Grace, a story about the slave trade which was the first Nigerian movie to be screened at the Cannes Festival; Mary Slessor, a 2008 TV series about the woman who abolished the killing of twins in Nigeria; Queen Amina; Black November; and most recently, Road to Redemption, which he wrote, produced and directed in 2013.
The audacity of a partnership
One of Amata’s works which no doubt helped convince the US Consulate General and the CSO that he was the right man, was the documentary, “Into the Delta,” which was screened in nine American universities including Cornell, New York University and UCLA.
While the US government provided the financial backing, the task before Amata was to go into the Delta; visit local communities; select teams of youth who had inspiring stories to tell; and then train them on the art of filmmaking. Afterwards, these young people were expected to return to their local communities with their skills, equipment and finances to produce real-life stories around themes of non-violence, conflict, oil, reconciliation, among others. Their movies will then be released on the silver screens with star-studded movie premieres.
Meanwhile, the whole experience, from their selection to their transformation will be made into a TV reality series titled “Dawn in the Creeks.”
By February 10th, 2014, when the press conference announcing the launch of the initiative was called, none of the participants had been selected. However, less than a month later, on March 3rd, Amata and his team, had visited three communities in Rivers, Bayelsa and Delta, selected a team of seven from each of these communities and sufficiently trained them on “transformation, leadership and Nollywood filmmaking” that the 21 young people now confidently introduce themselves with statements like: “My name is Chibuzor Joseph and I am a professional director of photography” or “My name is Lucky Singer Elvis and I am a professional producer,” among others.
The task is only half way done, but already Amata says he has “realised that this project is the most meaningful thing I have done in my life. When I picked them I was hoping just to transform them, but now, they have transformed me.” Coming from a man who has had over 50 movie award nominations and whose movie has been premiered at the United Nations, during the General Assembly, the statement carries great weight.
The speed at which things are progressing is however one of the major worries about the ambitious project. For instance, questions are being asked whether two weeks (the time between moving the participants to Lagos for their training and their graduation on Monday) are enough to transform total novices into professionals in various aspects of filmmaking, from unit production management to script writing; copy editing to directing, among others. Amata says the two weeks of intensive training was enough time for him to confidently say that the three teams which are each expected to produce a film, will do “an above average job.”
Their Monday graduation was in itself a story of how far they had come. Hosted by the US Consul General, Jeffrey Hawkins, at his Ikoyi residence, the event started two hours behind schedule, which – from their nervous glances – the Americans found quite embarrassing. Even after Amata arrived and explained that the tailor had showed up late with the dresses of the graduands, it did not sound as a good enough reason to keep everyone waiting. However, when a ten-minute documentary showing the selection process was played, it all made sense. It was hard to reconcile the lovely, resplendently dressed people sitting in the consul-general’s lawn that early afternoon with those in the documentary  – some of them in faded wrappers, with decrepit buildings in their communities as backdrop as they were given the good news of their selection to participate in the life changing project. A transformation had obviously taken place. Amata said he had to make a judgement call to “annoy people a bit and wait for the suits and pretty dresses to arrive because I wanted this to represent a fresh start for them.” It was well worth the wait.
Looking at their faces as they watched their old selves on the screen and congratulated themselves with high-fives and tears of joy, it dawned on all present what a big deal the project was.
All 21 of them, have amazing and inspiring stories. Yemi Adamolekun, the executive director of Enough is Enough Nigeria, who is a member of the board of the Niger Delta Legacy Engagement, narrated how before their trip to Lagos, “some of them had never been in an airport. Some said they were the first in their families to fly in an airplane. Some had never lodged in a hotel and for two weeks they have been lodged in Eko hotel. It is a big deal.”
One of the graduates recalled how they had shaken their heads in their community when Amata and his crew arrived. “Here they come again. What do they want this time? Always making promises and breaking them,” they said. He said he was not convinced until they arrived in Lagos.
Esther Jonathan from Ozoro community in Delta state who graduated as a producer, cried as she received her certificate. “I can’t believe it,” she said. “I had nobody.” Jonathan who has a National Diploma in Mathematics from the Delta state Polytechnic, said things had been very hard for her and her community ever since “toxic waste from the SPDC destroyed our land, killed many in the community. Hunger. Animals dying. It was sad. But with this, I am ready to change souls in my community. You will see us grow and make you proud beyond your expectations.”
Lunch time
The graduands presented a sculpted eagle to their “master” Jeta Amata in appreciation of his intervention. Overwhelmed with emotion, one of the graduands said, “I wanna keep dreaming. I don’t wanna wake up. It’s too good to be true. I don’t know what to call our master Jeta. I don’t know whether to call him a lord; I don’t know whether I’ll call him Jesus. Jeta Amata, God bless you. I will remain your boy till I die.” Another graduand, Dede, said, “They say don’t give a man a fish, teach him how to fish. For us, we have been taught how to catch fish and given enough fishes. Thank you Jeff, you will fly to the sky and the sky will be your limit.”
The journey continues for the new stars, and indeed for the entire crew, as the aim, according to Amata, is to reach 52 Niger Delta communities. As the teams work towards producing their movies, Amata said the reality show should start airing on TV from April. He’ll be hoping that his choices were spot on and that his students don’t disappoint him. If they heed the words of Jeffrey Hawkins, the US consul general, then disappointments will be scarce: “What matters at the end of the day is the stories you tell,” Hawkins said. “You are diplomats for the Niger Delta and you must tell the people your story in a truthful, honest, compelling way.” The world awaits.
source:thescoopng.com

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