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[[Category:Documentary films about revolutionaries]]
[[Category:Documentary films about revolutionaries]]
[[Category:Documentary films about violence against women]]
[[Category:Documentary films about violence against women]]
[[Category:Message to Man International Film Festival]]
[[Category:United Nations Association Film Festival]]
[[Category:11th United Nations Association Film Festival]]
[[Category:Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam]]
[[Category:Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam]]
[[Category:Documentary films about the Sri Lankan Civil War]]
[[Category:Documentary films about the Sri Lankan Civil War]]

Revision as of 23:51, 4 August 2017

My Daughter the Terrorist
GenreDocumentary
Directed byBeate Arnestad
Country of originNorway
Production
ProducerMorten Daae
Production locationSri Lanka
Running time52 Minutes

My Daughter the Terrorist is a 2007 documentary film about ‘twenty-four-year-olds Dharsika and Puhalchudar living and fighting side-by-side for seven years as part of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) elite force, the Black Tigers. The women describe their traumatic experiences at the hands of the Sri Lankan army, which led them to join the guerrilla group.[1][2]

Dharsika’s father died in the war left with her mother struggling to bring up her in a war-torn society.[3] Growing up in a Catholic family, Dharsika wanted to be a nun, but later joined the LTTE after the death of her father. Puhalchudar was displaced with her family in a refugee camp describing the horrific conditions at a young age.[4] Dharsika’s mother hopes to meet her daughter and Pahualchudar, during the rebel groups Hero’s Day Memorial, also known as Maaveerar Naal, only to place flowers on the grave of the unknown soldier.[3]

My Daughter the Terrorist is a film by Beate Arnestad, produced by Morten Daae that received the award for Best International Feature-length Documentary at the Message to Man International Film Festival in 2017[1] and was shown at the 11th United Nations Association Film Festival in 2008.[2] It also premiered at international film festivals in the United States, Belgium, Canada, Italy, Ukraine, Poland, Bogota, Norway, and Taiwan.[1]

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