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Danish documentary about asylum-seeker children wins IDFA award

TheCopenhagenPost
November 27th, 2015


This article is more than 9 years old.

Andreas Koefoed’s film impressed the jury at the world’s biggest documentary festival

The Danish documentary ‘Et hjem i verden’ (At Home in the World), directed by Andreas Koefoed, has won the ‘Best Mid-Length Documentary’ award at the world’s largest documentary festival, the IDFA in Amsterdam.

Koefoed’s film depicts the day-to-day lives of five asylum-seeker children at a Red Cross asylum school in Lynge in Denmark. The IDFA jury credited the film with tackling a current issue in a sensitive way.

“We are especially pleased with a film that manages to humanise the issues we are so concerned about today,” the jury wrote in its justification for the award.

“With great sensitivity and compassion for its characters, the director gives a face to the most vulnerable of refugees, children bravely coping with a new world. We were deeply moved by a film that provides people everywhere a slight ray of hope.”

New perspective
Sara Stockman, the film’s producer, sees it as an important supplement to the media coverage of the refugee crisis.

“At the same time it shows the public are looking for significant stories that can put the mainstream media’s coverage of the refugee crisis in perspective,” she said.

“Children are often represented by numbers. Andreas chooses to show the children are normal children, but caught in an unusual situation.”


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A survey carried out by Megafon for TV2 has found that 71 percent of parents have handed over children to daycare in spite of them being sick.

Moreover, 21 percent of those surveyed admitted to medicating their kids with paracetamol, such as Panodil, before sending them to school.

The FOLA parents’ organisation is shocked by the findings.

“I think it is absolutely crazy. It simply cannot be that a child goes to school sick and plays with lots of other children. Then we are faced with the fact that they will infect the whole institution,” said FOLA chair Signe Nielsen.

Pill pushers
At the Børnehuset daycare institution in Silkeborg a meeting was called where parents were implored not to bring their sick children to school.

At Børnehuset there are fears that parents prefer to pack their kids off with a pill without informing teachers.

“We occasionally have children who that they have had a pill for breakfast,” said headteacher Susanne Bødker. “You might think that it is a Panodil more than a vitamin pill, if it is a child who has just been sick, for example.”

Parents sick and tired
Parents, when confronted, often cite pressure at work as a reason for not being able to stay at home with their children.

Many declare that they simply cannot take another day off, as they are afraid of being fired.

Allan Randrup Thomsen, a professor of virology at KU, has heavily criticised the parents’ actions, describing the current situation as a “vicious circle”.

“It promotes the spread of viruses, and it adds momentum to a cycle where parents are pressured by high levels of sick-leave. If they then choose to send the children to daycare while they are still recovering, they keep the epidemic going in daycares, and this in turn puts a greater burden on the parents.”