A celebrated Japanese director has returned to Viet Nam to film her second
documentary on victims of Agent Orange (AO).
Masako Sakata, 61, says her docu-film focuses on the daily lives of AO
victims, including Vietnamese veterans, as well as their hopes and dreams.
"I hope the film will help support AO victims in their legal action
against American chemical companies," Sakata says. "I don’t know when
the film will be complete but I want people all around the world to know about
it."
Sakata’s first film, My Personal Requiem, made a big impact when it
was released in 2005. It was screened in the US,
France, Japan, Canada
and Cuba
and other countries.
Her mission to bring the plight of AO victims to the big screen has taken
her all over the country. She visited A So Airport (A Luoi District, ThuaThienHueProvince)
where the chemical was sprayed, where she filmed the lives of people living in
the area, and visited centres where victims are treated in Da NangCity.
She also met US veterans and lawyers in January to collect material for her
trip to Viet Nam.
"I came up with the idea of making the first film after my husband
died," she says. Sakata’s husband Greg David died of cancer in 2003 when
he was only 54.
David was a soldier in the American War in Viet
Nam for three years and was in DongThapProvince
where the US
military sprayed Agent Orange there. After leaving the army, Greg met Sakata in
the early 1970s and they fell in love. The couple went on to live in Japanese
cities of Tokyo and Kyoto. Greg didn’t want to return to the US because he
had "buried his sad past", Sakata says.
Before their marriage, David told Sakata he could not have children because
he had been exposed to Agent Orange during the war. "That was the only sad
thing Greg told me about Viet
Nam. Other things he told me about it were
often about a country with beautiful nature and friendly people," Sakata
says.
When her husband died Sakata says she dealt with her grief by collecting
information on Agent Orange. "I knew I had to come to Viet Nam,"
she says.
In 2004 she came to Viet
Nam with her friend, American photographer
Philip Jones Griffiths, who has photographed AO victims during the last 30
years.
"In Viet Nam
I met about 20 families whose members are victims of the chemical and about 100
other children. One question that I often ask is whether people are angry with
the American people, and the answer is always no," Sakata says.
"Families seem not to like to think about the past, they focus instead on
life now.
"I found victims everywhere. Children who were not even born then are
suffering from all kinds of deformities and illnesses. In spite of such
difficulties and poverty, everywhere I found love, caring, and warmth. Meeting
the victims and their families helped me heal." — VNS