
Along the
fragrant streets of Bali and desolate
Acehnese refugee camps of the Indonesian
Archipelago, Midwife-Ibu Robin Lim--finds
herself at a time and place where
midwifery is put to the test. Filmed
immediately following the December 26,
2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, this culturally
mesmerizing, heart-wrenching documentary
vividly demonstrates why we must change
our protocols for pregnancy and
childbirth, and return to a gentle,
natural method, if our planet is to
survive the dominance of mankind.
There is
a war being fought day and night, in every
country, to gain an asset more precious
than gold or oil--our human capacity to
love. The battlefield is the collective
body of women. This conflict is waged when
she is profoundly vulnerable and most in
need of protection--the sacred hours
surrounding birth. It is at the fulcrum of
birth, and the first hour thereafter, that
individuals develop either an intact, or
an impaired, capacity to love. It is our
ability to love that makes us either
helpful, or harmful, to all sentient
beings and our environment.
Technology, when used inappropriately in
birth, disempowers women, harms the
bonding process, sabotages breastfeeding,
and compromises our essential human right
to love and be loved. Not only
environmental disasters are standing
between women and their bodies, but also
the "big business" of birth. Opposing
these forces, and providing a loving birth
in the midst of chaos and crisis, is both
the burden and the gift of the Guerrilla
Midwife.
Award-Winner &/or Official Selection: Over
25 Film Festivals Worldwide