Films Produced

Films Produced by Mila Productions

NORBU: The Precious Red Panda

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(2009, 25 mins.)

Language:                                Nepali
Subtitle:                                     English

Camera by:                               Narayan Prasai, Tsering Rhitar Sherpa

Edited by:                                  Tsering Rhitar Sherpa, Sabina Basnet
Produced & Directed by:        Tsering Rhitar Sherpa

A Mila Productions film produced
for
WWF Nepal


synopsis

Red panda (Ailurus fulgens) is one of the poorly known small-bodied mammalian carnivore adapted to the herbivore diet. Globally, it is found in mountainous regions of India, China, Bhutan, Burma, Laos and Nepal. In Nepal, it is distributed in an altitudinal range from 1500 metres above sea level (masl) to 4000 masl in the Himalayas. It is known to inhabit the eight protected areas (PA) of Nepal such as Kangchenjungha Conservation Area (KCA), Makalu Barun National Park and Buffer Zone (MBNP BZ), Sagarmatha National Park and Buffer Zone (SNP BZ), Langtang National Park and Buffer Zone (LNP BZ), Manaslu Conservation Area, Annapurna Conservation Area (ACA), Dhorpatan Hunting Reserve (DHR), and Rara National Park and Buffer Zone (RNP BZ) ( BPP 1995, Yonzon et al. 1997) including adjoining areas like biological corridors and bottlenecks of these PAs.

In Nepal, Yonzon et al. (1997) estimated a total 314 individuals on the basis of habitat suitability index. However, survival of red panda in its natural habitats is threatened by  ever increasing anthropogenic disturbances that has resulted into loss, fragmentation and degradation of its habitats. Red pandas are extremely vulnerable to these disturbances especially due to their highly specialized niche.

In an attempt to conserve red panda in their natural habitats, the Government of Nepal enlisted the red panda in the schedule 1 of the National Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act (1973) as a protected species. Furthermore, IUCN has also enlisted it in endangered status; whereas it is also categorized under Appendix I of Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) thereby restricting the trade of red panda and its parts. In order to materialize these policies the Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation Nepal in collaboration with WWF Nepal has recently drafted an action plan for red panda conservation. Besides, WWF Nepal envisages the landscape level conservation of red panda and other flagship species with the implementation of conservation based initiatives under the framework of Sacred Himalayan Landscape in the Eastern Himalayas.

This film reflects some moments of Langtang National Park and Buffer Zone, where the red panda, also known as Norbu in local language, has been identified as a focal species for conservation. Specifically the film focuses on the conservation and cultural significance of the red panda and how local communities in partnership with scientists, government and conservation organizations are involved in red panda conservation. With interviews of various stakeholders and experts, this documentary calls actions from the conservationists, communities, and policy makers who have invariably ignored its importance to maintaining integrity of the mountainous ecosystem and bringing livelihood benefits to mountain communities.

100 Views Kathmandu

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(2008, 38 mins.)

Language:                               English / Nepali

Subtitle:                                   English

Camera by:                              Narayan Prasai, Tsering Rhitar Sherpa

Edited by:                               Tsering Rhitar Sherpa, Sabina Basnet

Produced & Directed by:        Libby Hathorn, Tsering Rhitar Sherpa


100 Views Kathmandu

Synopsis

100 Views Kathmandu is a film that documents 100Views Art & Literacy Program - creative teaching project focused on an icon in the students' local area. (More information can be found at http://www.100views.com.au.) This initiative was conceived, tested and founded by award-winning Australian children's author, Libby Hathorn. Libby visited Kathmandu as part of Thulo April 2008 to establish the first 100Views program in Nepal. 

Libby and her friend and artist, Pat Granville Smith, together ran a three day training course for the teachers at the model school. The course consisted of 3 poetry and 3 art workshops and at the completion the teachers were well equipped to introduce the program to the school. You can read more about the running of the program by reading our blog posting. Mt Everest has been chosen as the icon for this first running of the project in Nepal. You can also view many great photos from the program by visiting our photos page

At the conclusion of the teacher training component we held a 100Views launch to celebrate the official opening of the project in the school. The program was attended by all of the students at the school and gave the teachers an opportunity to share some of their works either by reading some of their poems or by displaying their paintings, sketches and models of Mt. Everest. The program concluded with the students lighting 100 candles which was a very symbolic and special moment for everyone there. 

This program is an exciting ongoing initiative that provides another aspect to teacher training that focuses particularly on creativity. We have worked with the teachers to help them to apply the skills they have learned in the 100Views program to their daily classroom teaching.

Beyul: The Sacred Hidden Valleys

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(2007, 30 mins, DV-Cam)

Language: Sherpa / Nepali / English
Subtitle: English
Concept by: Dr. Lhakpa Norbu Sherpa
Camera: Deepak Bajracharya
Sound: Dawa Lama
Edited by: Deepak Rauniyar
Tsering Rhitar Sherpa
Directed by:
Tsering Rhitar Sherpa

A Mila Productions film produced
for
The Mountain Institute
Supported by the Ford Foundation

This documentary is filmed in the Khumbu valley located at the foot of Mt. Everest. The area is now declared as Sagarmatha National Park and a World Heritage Site. Locals believe that Khumbu is one of the many Beyuls - the sacred valleys of the Himalaya, hidden by the 8th century Buddhist saint Padmasmbhava as refuges for people suffering from the impacts of war, conflicts, famine, or religious persecution. The Khumbu Beyul was discovered by the ancestors of the Sherpa people escaping religious conflict in Tibet.

The film introduces traditional Sherpa views of the Beyul as a sacred space, co-habited by many other natural and supernatural beings, where negative thoughts and actions such as quarreling, polluting, and taking life are discouraged because the place is considered spiritually powerful. It is these positive attitudes and self restraint on part of the people that made Khumbu not only a peaceful place for people to live and visit but also a safe refuge for wild animals and plants. The sympathetic attitudes of Beyul believers supported most Beyuls to become national parks and protected areas. The role of the ancient belief system in conservation however has received little recognition. The lack of recognition, outside cultural domination and the influence of modern education that do not take into account the value of the indigenous knowledge have eroded knowledge about Beyul values. This film reveals both the strength of the Beyul concept in maintaining environmental and cultural integrity of a place as well as the vulnerability of concepts to change. This film is produced to raise awareness among viewers of the role of sacred natural sites such as Beyul in protecting the environment and maintaining harmonious relationships between the land and people throughout the world.

Festivals & Screenings

2008 Nepal International Indigenous Film Festival, Kathmandu, Nepal
2008 Various Workshops, Nepal

Protecting the God's Pet: Saving Snow Leopards in the Himalayas

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(2006-7, 18 mins, DV-Cam)

Language: Sherpa / Nepali
Subtitle:
English
Concept by:
Late Yeshi Choden Lama

Tsering Rhitar Sherpa
Camera by:
Tsering Rhitar Sherpa
Edited by:
Deepak Rauniyar

Tsering Rhitar Sherpa
Produced and Directed by:
Tsering Rhitar Sherpa

A Mila Productions film produced
for
WWF Nepal

The endangered Snow Leopard is found in the Himalayas and Central Asia. There are estimated 4,500-7,500 snow leopards in the wild. In Nepal there are about 300-500 Snow Leopards scattered across the remote, northern mountains. Their survival is threatened by habitat degradation, loss of natural prey, poaching, retaliatory killing by villagers and inadequate national level policies and conservation initiatives.

A key challenge faced by conservationists is that the inaccessible rugged terrain of Snow Leopard habitats makes scientific researches and conservation initiatives difficult and expensive. However, in the Shey Phoksundo National Park, following a Snow Leopard and prey species survey in 1999, efforts have been directed towards local level monitoring and mitigating conflict between villagers and the snow leopard.

Similar efforts are underway in Kangchenjunga Conservation Area and other mountain protected areas in the Sacred Himalayan Landscape-Nepal, a priority area for landscape level conservation in the Eastern Himalayas.

It is in this area that this film's story is based - driven primarily by two characters Lhakpa Tseten Sherpa, 73, and Himali Chungda Sherpa, 45, from the remote Ghunsa Village at the base of mount Kangchenjunga. Both of them have been involved in Snow Leopard conservation effort for long; but the interesting difference between them is that one is driven into this from his own conviction based on his deep-rooted culture and belief (Buddhists believe that harming any animal is a sin and advocates empathizing the pain the animals go through), while the other is younger and is involved in the conservation effort more out of scientific and modern ethics, and works closely with the local NGO, Himali Conservation Forum (HCF) and Kangchenjunga Conservation Area Project (KCAP) . The film thus illustrates the changing faces of the local conservationists, and passing on the tradition - from Lhakpa Tseten to Himali Chungda.

Impact of DIPECHO-CPDRR

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Community Responses to the Impact of Activities Conducted by DIPECHO-CPDRR
(Community Preparedness for Disaster Risk Reduction in Central and Eastern Nepal)

(2007, 20 mins, DV-Cam).

Language: Nepali
Subtitle:
English
Production Coordinator: Megh Ranjani Rai

Kul Bahadur Moktan

Anil Maharjan
Narration: Sonam Dolkar Lama
Edited by: Deepak Rauniyar

Tsering Rhitar Sherpa
Assistant Director:
Deepak Rauniyar
Produced & Directed by:
Tsering Rhitar Sherpa

 

A Mila Productions film produced
for
DIPECHO-Lutheran World Federation, Nepal
and The European Commission

Nepal is a landlocked Himalayan country in South Asia bordered by Tibet to the north and by India to the south, east and west. Nepal boasts eight of the world's top ten highest mountains, including Mount Everest, and is famous for its tourism, trekking, and national wildlife parks, and its many beautiful temples and places of worship.

However, Nepal is also one of the most natural disaster prone countries in the world.

Variable climatic conditions and active tectonic processes have made her vulnerable to various types of natural disasters. In addition, other man-made factors such as unplanned settlement, lack of public awareness, increasing population, weak economic condition and low literacy rate have also made her vulnerable to various types of natural disasters. With these factors in view, DIPECHO put into operation a project called "CPDRR - Community Preparedness for Disaster Risk Reduction" - in 4 municipalities in Kathmandu, one municipality and four VDCs each in Jhapa and Rautahat. DIPECHO-CPDRR focused on flood and earthquake, and contributed to disaster risk reduction by enhancing awareness, capacity building, community preparedness and institutional responsiveness.

This film documents the community responses to the impact of activities conducted by DIPECHO-CPDRR.