Waubonsee Community College

To live is better than to die, by Weijun Chen

Label
To live is better than to die, by Weijun Chen
Language
chi
Characteristic
videorecording
Intended audience
For High School; College; Adult audiences
Main title
To live is better than to die
Medium
electronic resource
Oclc number
747798605
Responsibility statement
by Weijun Chen
Runtime
59
Summary
This is a heartbreaking story from Wenlou, a small village in central China, where 60% of the villagers are infected with HIV. There are at least 250,000 people in seven provinces in central China who were infected as a result of a blood donor program in the early nineties. Impoverished peasants sold their blood to clinics that used unsanitary gathering methods. Nevertheless, the government does not offer any help or compensation, and has supressed protests from the villagers with force. China's health care system has fared poorly in the transition from socialism to capitalism. This is especially evident in the villages. The director spent months in Wenlou with farmer Ma Shengyi and his family. Ma Shengyi, his wife and two of their three children are all infected. He brings to the screen a real-life picture of an ordinary Chinese family devoured by a disease caused by official negligence and then being persecuted by the government in their struggle for help
Target audience
general
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