That childhood staple, Sesame Street, has come to Kosovo. I’ve actually known this for a while, but never seen anything in the English press about it. Now “The World According to Sesame Street,” a documentary is explaining how the kids program has become a global phenomenon. The LA Times says in a review:
It runs in more than 120 countries, mostly in dubbed versions of the original, but in more and more places — beginning as far back as 1972, after an inquiry from Germany — it is being produced locally, retooled for the native audience, with new characters and settings reflecting native culture and concerns.” The documentary focuses on productions of “Sesame Street” in three
countriesplaces: Bangladesh, Kosovo and South Africa.
According to the PBS site, Independent Lens:
Creating a locally produced Sesame project in Kosovo was more than just creating a children’s TV show. As Producer Basia Nikonorow explains, “We really believe that a Sesame project could aid in the peace process.” After years of violent ethnic strife between Serbs and Albanians, the show had the potential to build peace and tolerance with a new generation of children, showing them that their ethnic counterparts were just kids, too.
At the same site you can see some videos of the production team.
I think this is pretty good stuff. The children of countries places like Kosovo need all the help they can get in forming a future multi-ethnic home, where all ethnic groups can live in peace with one another.
1 comment:
That is brilliant. Only Jesus can truly bring peace, but Sesame Street can sure put in their two bits and help bring understanding!!
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