SYNOPSIS
Ninety
miles east of St. Petersburg in Russia, a small community of people
is growing its own organic food and attracting a lot of attention from
the neighbors and the government. The attention comes partly because
their farm is successful, but mainly because nearly half of the residents
of this community are developmentally disabled. These disabled people
had been considered incapable of taking care of themselves before coming
here. Now, living together with dedicated volunteers from Russia and
around the world, they are working members of a remarkable pioneering
community.
This film
profiles one hectic week during the harvest of 2000. Winter is fast
approaching. All the crops, including forty tons of potatoes, must
be brought in, while a surprise invitation from the farmer's market
offers them their first chance ever to sell their produce openly without
mafia intervention. Overwhelmed, they ask for help from the local villages.
Students from schools are given leave to help with the harvest, and
neighbors pitch in with phenomenal generosity. In a land where economic
and cultural opportunity is so limited, it is amazing to see how spirits
soar. This community of disabled people and foreigners is a source
of hope for the residents themselves and for their neighbors.
45 minutes.
Available as both DVD and download. |