Elena
Year: 2021 | 30 minutes | Spanish and Haitian Creole with English subtitles
Directors: Michèle Stephenson
Premiere: World/Vice/Aljeezra
About The Film
In 1937, tens of thousands of Haitians and Dominicans of Haitian descent were exterminated by the Dominican army, on the basis of anti-black racism. Fast-forward to 2013, the Dominican Republic’s Supreme Court stripped the citizenship of anyone with Haitian parents, retroactive to 1929, rendering more than 200,000 people stateless. Because of this ruling, Elena has lost her citizenship, and her family stands to lose their rightful access to legal residency in the Dominican Republic if they don’t manage to get their documents in time. Negotiating a mountain of opaque bureaucratic processes and a racist, hostile society, Elena becomes the face of the struggle to remain in a country built on the labor of her father and forefathers. Director Michèle Stephenson’s documentary follows Elena and her family through their tribulations and small joys, as they struggle to remain in the country they’ve called home for generations.
DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT
As a child, growing up in a Haitian and Latinx household and diaspora communities in North America, I continued to overhear stories about the history of my birthplace relating to race, color, class, colonialism and human rights. Those observations formed the basis of how I made sense of the world that surrounded me, especially as those notions collided with the racism, segregation and discrimination that we faced in our adopted countries. Those experiences fuelled my passion to dig deeper into the consequences of our deeply painful common history of slavery and colonialism and how we continue to internalize such self-hatred.
Elena in some ways is a culmination of years of working through storytelling approaches that allowed me to land back home and use a creative way to unearth and express that childhood pain.
As a hyphenated Black Latina, I felt compelled to express how deeply embedded the racial caste system is in our Latinx communities and how identity and citizenship are so closely connected to anti-Blackness—and yet its discussion either escapes or is superficially misconstrued by mainstream media.
Elena highlights universal themes of access to citizenship, migration and systemic racism. In the US, we are witnessing the chipping away at immigrants’ and citizens’ rights. We are facing a global crisis of white supremacist manipulation of migrants’ rights, birthright citizenship, and human dignity for black and brown people.
My objective is to connect the film to a network of committed partners in the Caribbean region, Latin America, the US, and internationally, to utilize the film as a platform for their work on protecting the rights of migrants and citizens, and to deepen people’s understanding of the intersection between anti-Black racism, migration, and citizenship rights.
– Michèle Stephenson, Director/Producer
AWARDS
- Jury Award – Best Short Documentary, BlackStar Film Festival (2021)
- LOLA Award Honorable Mention, Philadelphia Latino Film Festival (2021)
- Official Selection, DOC NYC (2021)
- Official Selection, New Orleans International Film Festival (2021)
- Official Selection, Trinidad + Tobago Film Festival (2021)
- Official Selection, New Orleans Film Festival (2021)
- Official Selection, Double Exposure Film Festival (2021)
- Official Selection, 1261 Film Festival (2021)