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The man who mends women : the wrath of hippocrates / a film by Therry Michel and Colette Braeckman ; in co-production with R. T. B. F. Documentary Section, Public Sénat, Lichtpunt, WIP, the Center for Cinema and Audiovisual of the Wallonia Brussels Federation and of Voo.

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Independent World Cinema: Classic and Contemporary Film. Available online

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Format:
Video
Contributor:
Alexander Street Press.
Radio-Télévision belge de la communauté culturelle française, production company.
Public sénat (Television network), production company.
Lichtpunt (Firm), production company.
Wallonie Image Production, production company.
Language:
Bantu (Other)
English
French
Swahili
Subjects (All):
Mukwege, Denis.
Rape--Congo (Democratic Republic).
Rape.
Rape victims--Medical care--Congo (Democratic Republic).
Rape victims.
Rape as a weapon of war--Congo (Democratic Republic).
Rape as a weapon of war.
Rape victims--Medical care.
Congo (Democratic Republic).
Genre:
Documentary films.
Video recordings.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (113 minutes)
Other Title:
L'homme qui répare les femmes: la colère d'Hippocrate
Place of Publication:
New York, NY : ArtMattan Productions, 2015.
Language Note:
In French, Swahili, English, and Bantu.
System Details:
data file
Summary:
Portrait of the impressive life and work of internationally renowned gynecologist Dr. Denis Mukwege from the Democratic Republic of Congo. He received the 2014 prestigious Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought, for his struggle against sexual violence. Mukwege medically assisted over 40,000 sexually abused women in sixteen years of professional practice. Sexual violence against women has been used as a weapon of war for years in the violence-ridden and poverty-stricken Democratic Republic of Congo. In order to provide medical, psychological and emotional aid to the victims, Dr. Mukwege founded the Panzi hospital in Bukavu in 1999. Besides his work as a physician Dr. Mukwege also defends human rights and seeks to raise global awareness on the issue of sexual violence in his country. He condemns the political reluctance to tackle the problem and is not afraid to hit the nail on the head. His work is not without danger, as Dr. Mukwege experienced in 2012, when armed men entered his home and started shooting. Mukwege and his family survived the attack, but his guard was killed. The doctor now lives cloistered in his hospital in Bukavu under the protection of the United Nation peacekeepers. The women, whose physical and emotional integrity and dignity have been restored, stand beside him, true activists for peace, and hungry for justice.
Notes:
Title from resource description page (viewed July 22, 2016).
Other Format:
Original version:
OCLC:
964547509
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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