The Greatest
Silence:
Rape in the Congo
SYNOPSIS
Since 1998 a brutal war has been raging in the Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC). Over 4 million people have died. And
there are the uncountable casualties: the many tens of
thousands of women and girls who have been systematically
kidnapped, raped, mutilated and tortured by soldiers from both
foreign militias and the Congolese army.
The world knows nothing of these women. Their stories have
never been told. They suffer and die in silence. In The
Greatest Silence: Rape in the Congo these brave women finally
speak.
Emmy Award winning producer/director Lisa F. Jackson spent
2006 in the war zones of eastern DRC documenting the tragic
plight of women and girls in that country's intractable
conflict. She was afforded privileged access to not only the
grotesque realities of life in Congo (including interviews
with self-confessed rapists) but also to examples of
resiliency, resistance, courage and grace.
Jackson was herself gang raped in 1976 and shared her
experience with the survivors she interviewed. These women in
turn recount their stories with an honesty and immediacy
pulverizing in its intimacy and detail. The film is a journey
into a literal heart of darkness, a search for survivors who
pay witness to their own experiences, and break the silence.
Background, context and opinion are provided by interviews
with peacekeepers, politicians, activists, doctors and
priests. But above all there is the wrenching testimony from
dozens of survivors of sexual violence who recount stories of
chilling barbarity. This film gives them dignity, a face and a
voice that will finally break the silence that surrounds their
plight.