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Alemayehu, Sisay and Eleni are three young Ethiopians who were adopted in the mid 1990s by an extended Australian family. At the time, part of that life-changing experience was recorded in award-winning documentary Little Brother, Little Sister. Ten years on, the two brothers (aged 19 and 16) and their 14-year-old sister are returning to their homeland—with their adoptive parents and siblings—to reconnect with the family, friends and culture they left behind. In Addis Ababa they are finally reunited with their elder sister Bizunesh and grandmother. Through the family’s recollections, we discover the details of why and how the three children came to be in Australia. From the teenagers themselves, we find out how they feel now and who they have become. In particular, we hear from Alemayehu, who was a streetwise 11-year-old, already working to support his family, when he left Ethiopia. His transition to a new life has been fraught, but what will it be like for him back in the homeland he so desperately yearns for? And how will his experience compare to his younger brother Sisay’s, whose dream is to represent Australia on the sports field? Or to Eleni, who seems happily settled in her beachside life? Exploring contemporary issues surrounding inter-racial adoption and immigration, this is a poignant story of identity and belonging, as the teenagers discover whether it is possible to find a place in two different worlds. A Film Australia National Interest Program in association with Iris Pictures, the New South Wales Film and Television Office and SBS Independent. Developed with the assistance of the Film Australia/New South Wales Film and Television Office Hothouse Scheme.
Click to see production stills Photographers: Simon Cardwell and Belinda Mason
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Executive Producer Penny Robins Producer Mary-Ellen Mullane Director Belinda Mason Writer Belinda Mason Narrator Tara Morice Classification Exempt (for educational purposes only) For Teachers Level: Secondary, Tertiary, Lifelong Learning Curriculum links include Studies of Society and Environment, Media and English. Download Teachers Notes here
What the Critics Have Said "A warm story of identity, a sense of place and the curious crossovers that have to be absorbed when your destiny embraces two different worlds." Doug Anderson, Sydney Morning Herald, 1 January 2007
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