Want to see how the other half live?
Photo courtesy of The Helper

Want to see how the other half live?



If you’re a parent with a domestic helper in your employ, you need to see The Helper, a locally produced movie following the real-life stories of Hong Kong’s helper community. After a premier earlier this year, the documentary finally opened to the public last night.

The feature-length documentary is the brainchild of British film director Joanna Bowers, herself an expat mother living in Hong Kong. It will make you laugh and it will make you cry, but ultimately The Helper will give you an insight into the lives of this largely ignored immigrant group of workers.

At a preview screening for a selection of Hong Kong’s media at the Foreign Correspondent’s Club earlier this week, Bowers said the idea for the movie came about after wandering through Central on a Sunday when she first moved here from LA. She was intrigued to find out more about the 300,000+ domestic helper population that makes such a significant contribution to life here, yet doesn’t seem to be fully integrated into society.

Following a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign, Bowers raised enough money to begin the project which culminated in a 110 minute-long documentary that is now on general release.

“I’m excited that we are finally able to put Hong Kong’s migrant domestic workers in the spotlight,” she said. “These women are such an overlooked sector of society, yet are an integral part of so many Hong Kong families. Their stories are incredibly powerful - heartbreaking and inspiring.”

Grittier stories include that of Nurul Hidayah, a young Indonesian helper who is accused of theft by her employer. She is later found not-guilty, but the event triggers a tragic downward spiral of events from which she can find no escape. When helpers are fired from their employment, within two weeks they lose all official status in Hong Kong. Hidayah soon finds herself alone, pregnant and living on a beach on the Gold Coast. Eventually discovered by an employee of local charity PathFinders, Hidayah is offered a place to stay and recourse to healthcare and legal aid, but after giving birth in a public hospital finds herself back in court fighting a $100,000 hospital bill for using hospital facilities as a non-official resident.

Meanwhile, part-time hiker Liza Avelino proves that there are real people with real dreams behind the mops and the brooms, as the film follows her in her ambitious quest to scale mountains in both Japan and Nepal. She has since gone on to summit Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania and will be a guest speaker at the TEDx Tin Hau Women series of talks next month (Nov 3, The Cube, PMQ, Aberdeen Street, www.ted.com).

And interwoven throughout these tales is the story of the Unsung Heroes, a choir from the domestic worker community, and their challenging journey to perform on the main stage of Clockenflap.

These are by no means the ‘worst’ stories in Hong Kong - charities such as PathFinders have cases on their books that would make your hair curl. But the film adequately demonstrates that these ladies who run our errands and clean our houses, scrub our floors and polish our windows, do our shopping, make our beds, and often put our children to bed at night, are real people too. And their voices need to be heard. Ironically, if it wasn’t for them, many of the invited guests at this week’s screening wouldn’t have been able to be there to watch it in the first place.

The Helper, AMC Cinema Pacific Place, screenings until Nov 3, check amccinemas.com.hk for timings. 51% of proceeds will benefit non-profit organisations PathFinders, Enrich and Mission for Migrant Workers.



Jennifer S. Deayton

Writer, Editor & Journalism Instructor

7 年

Wonderful to see this get a theatrical release. I definitely need to check it out!

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Carolynne Dear的更多文章

  • Food, fun and inspiring stories to celebrate International Women's Day

    Food, fun and inspiring stories to celebrate International Women's Day

    March 8 is International Women’s Day (IWD) and to mark the date, local entrepreneurs Mawgan Batt, Emma Pike and Lori…

  • Communists and colonists

    Communists and colonists

    Hong Kong history is a fascinating thing. Author John Saeki explains why his latest novel, The Tiger Hunters of Tai O…

  • All boxed up

    All boxed up

    This year, the Hong Kong-based Box of Hope team will deliver Christmas to thousands of impoverished children throughout…

  • Tales of the tandor

    Tales of the tandor

    From Lan Kwai Fong to Lahore, restaurateur Syed Asim Hussain tells Carolynne Dear how his expat childhood inspired his…

  • Art with heart

    Art with heart

    The Hong Kong Human Rights Arts Prize closes for entries on November 1. Director and former winner Katie Vajda explains…

  • Girl power

    Girl power

    Come and be inspired at Hong Kong’s first women’s TEDx event, says Carolynne Dear Hong Kong plays host to its first…

  • Girls and glass ceilings - will our sparky daughters achieve the impossible?

    Girls and glass ceilings - will our sparky daughters achieve the impossible?

    Carolynne Dear caught up with women's advocate Dame Barbara Stocking to talk about her latest research on subconscious…

  • Is this the future of secondary education?

    Is this the future of secondary education?

    Traditional learning is dead, says school principal Natalie Chan. Carolynne Dear found out how she is single-handedly…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了