While these Ethiopian farmers relish in the high grade of the coffee beans, they are steeply underpaid because of global trade markets. The Stock Exchange dictates coffee prices through the Starbucks of the world, but overlooks the human element that brings the crop to life. This sad situation, so rampant in our world, is one constantly beaten over our heads through documentaries and grassroots organizations. Oxfam, the global Human Rights organization, is one such group, but within their support of Black Gold take a creative angle rarely seen. It aspires to a level of documentary filmmaking achieved by Erik Gandini's anti-consumption work Surplus, though less abstract. It is found in Black Gold by the ability of transparency and slight objectivism from the filmmakers. It is clearly a film in favor of Fair Trade and sympathetic to the coffee farmers, but their voices are heard individually in contrast to depicted images of greed in world trade.
Selected at 5 major film festivals, including Sundance, Black Gold captures the sweeping landscapes of Ethiopia, as well as its poverty. The cinematography is visually interesting in that it also distances Western viewers from the farmers through these landscapes and their language. Our only guide to this world is through Tadesse Meskela, who translates their words and their hearts. In contrast there are close ups of people sipping Starbucks, the barsitas and a glut of middlemen in the coffee bean chain. Scenes of the dizzying floor at the NY Stock exchange reinforce the smoke and mirrors that keep consumers distanced from coffee farmers. Whether an intended effect or not, it captures what Fair Trade labels and organizations want to eliminate, bringing the farmer's bean closer to the consumer's cup.
The documentary further achieves an entertaining experience by avoiding the talking head interviews that often suck the life out of cinema. The filmmakers are at the table in union meetings, in the fields with farmers, on the road with Tadesse Meskela and on the floor at factories. Footage of the International Barista competition or at the Illy Coffee factory in Italy is a treat for any coffee lover, making the interviews genuine and scenic. The primal heartbeat provided by the soundtrack of Ethiopian music is also a soothing coat to a hard message to swallow. This message is what we are faced with as consumers, not so much to stop buying coffee because of corrupt trade, but the proactive choice of fair trade.
Ethiopia is the best symbol of this dilemma, not just because it is the motherland of coffee, but due to the country's famine and poverty. A downpour of international aid cannot cure systemic poverty; it is trade equality that will carry the greatest benefit. The Fair Trade labeling organization of the US, TransFair USA, attests to the exponential benefits seen in many South American countries. A majority of the world's coffee comes from countries like Brazil and also throughout the mountainous growing regions of the south. Here cooperatives that build Fair Trade programs with buyers, reap the rewards of higher profits into community and infrastructure. In Black Gold, as we watch Tadesse Meskela talk with Ethiopian coffee farmers, it becomes a shared hope that they too will gain from the equalizing endeavors of Fair Trade.
There are many poignant scenes in Black Gold and the message rings across clear, though questions still arise. They only touch upon the drastic role the World Trade Organization (WTO), as well as the element of systemic poverty. As the world's second most widely traded commodity, coffee has a bewildering trail too vast to ponder over a cup of coffee. Though if the millions of daily coffee drinkers gave it a thought just once, the benefits of Fair Trade could reveal itself one cup at a time.
Published by Jason Cangialosi - Featured Contributor in Arts & Entertainment
The past meets future for Jason in a moment fused by creative experiences in music, writing, film and philosophy providing a nexus of the complex world to come. A freelance creator and ghostwriter of books,... View profile
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- Black Gold address the imperative of supporting farmers from the motherland of coffee, Ethiopia
- Ethiopia is the best symbol of this global dilemma due to the country's famine and poverty
- If the millions of daily coffee drinkers gave it a thought just once, the benefits of Fair Trade could reveal itself one cup at a time
3 Comments
Post a CommentFor those of you who are interested in the issue of Fair trade, there is a powerful documentary out called "Black Gold," that documents the lives and struggles of Ethiopian coffee farmers and clearly demonstrates why all of us should be asking for Fair Trade coffee. "Black Gold" was recently released in the theater but is now available to the public on DVD via California Newsreel. You can read more about the documentary or pick up a copy of it here at http://newsreel.org/
I was wondering if it was at all possible to announce to your members that this film is now available to the general public. It is a great way to introduce new people to the issue of fair trade or to show at community organizing/activist meetings. The more we can reach consumers, the more likely we are to make a difference.
I hadn't even heard of this movies. Thanks for the heads-up, Jason. I'll put this one Netflix watch. Terrific article!
While Fair Trade has done a great deal of service in highlighting the ills of the current state of global coffee trade, it is by no means the panacea that some would make it out to be. The good is in the public recognition of the problem. The danger is in presuming that Fair Trade is a complete, and naturally the only, solution.
http://theshot.coffeeratings.com/2006/12/fair-trade-or-unfair-trade/