
A recycled documentary essay in which filmmaker Jos de Putter gives the eighth commandment an ecological dimension. The premise is that we have plundered nature over the past centuries, making climate change no longer a possibility but a frightening reality. A philosophical and theological layer in the film poses the question of whether a reinterpretation of God's presence in nature would help humanity relate to nature differently, leading us to treat the earth more carefully.
A recycled documentary essay in which filmmaker Jos de Putter gives the eighth commandment an ecological dimension. The premise is that we have plundered nature over the past centuries, making climate change no longer a possibility but a frightening reality. A philosophical and theological layer in the film poses the question of whether a reinterpretation of God's presence in nature would help humanity relate to nature differently, leading us to treat the earth more carefully.
The story of how the power statue of Chief Ne Kuko was stolen must not be forgotten. This nkisi resides, encased behind glass, in a European museum. The history behind this mysterious statue connects restitution activist Mwazulu Diyabanza with the small village of Kikuku in the mountains of Boma, Democratic Republic of Congo.