A chorus of strangers reappropriates the difficult testimony of a young Congolese refugee to better transform it. A documentary essay of poignant simplicity.
"People tell stories, but when it comes to their own, they either lose their memory or decide to keep quiet. Born in 1994 in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which she had to leave for Rwanda and then Burundi, Akili Nadege is a survivor. She has lived through prison and torture, mourned the loss of a murdered father and a country torn apart, and experienced the cruelest isolation and solitude of all through exile. After a life of hardship, how can you find the strength to tell your story? And who to tell it to? In this intimate documentary essay, director Claudine Ndimbira asked the young woman to have her story told by a chorus of readers - men and women who know neither Akili nor her past, but who will develop a deep bond of empathy with her as they read. This simple polyphonic device produces an echo of humanity from one voice to the next, while Akili Nadège gradually finds her place on the screen - and, finally, her own voice.