After the bloody genocide 20 years ago, Rwanda made a remarkable turnaround, which was primarily made possible by the country's women. It sounds like a feminist utopia: the country is ruled by a majority of women, it is a leader in IT technology, and it is experiencing rapid economic growth. Only 20 years after the genocide, Rwanda is considered one of the most progressive nations on the African continent. First and foremost, women have been responsible for reconciliation within society. GOD IS NOT WORKING ON SUNDAY! follows two Rwandan activists, Godelieve and Florida, as they work to address the trauma of genocide. Over a five year period the filmmaker Leona Goldstein, herself the descendant of Holocaust survivors, has looked into the question of how a society in which perpetrators and victims are still neighbors can be reunited and how the unspeakable can be discussed. The result sounds like a feminist utopia: the country is predominantly ruled by women, it's a leader in IT technology and has rapid economic growth.
After the bloody genocide 20 years ago, Rwanda made a remarkable turnaround, which was primarily made possible by the country's women.
After the bloody genocide 20 years ago, Rwanda made a remarkable turnaround, which was primarily made possible by the country's women.
It sounds like a feminist utopia: the country is ruled by a majority of women, it is a leader in IT technology, and it is experiencing rapid economic growth. Only 20 years after the genocide, Rwanda is considered one of the most progressive nations on the African continent. First and foremost, women have been responsible for reconciliation within society.
GOD IS NOT WORKING ON SUNDAY! follows two Rwandan activists, Godelieve and Florida, as they work to address the trauma of genocide. Over a five year period the filmmaker Leona Goldstein, herself the descendant of Holocaust survivors, has looked into the question of how a society in which perpetrators and victims are still neighbors can be reunited and how the unspeakable can be discussed. The result sounds like a feminist utopia: the country is predominantly ruled by women, it's a leader in IT technology and has rapid economic growth.