Japanese film documents Agent Orange victims
Masako Sakata, 61, says her docu-film focuses on the daily lives of AO victims, including Vietnamese veterans, as well as their hopes and dreams.
"I hope the film will help support AO victims in their legal action against American chemical companies," Sakata says. "I don’t know when the film will be complete but I want people all around the world to know about it."
Sakata’s first film, My Personal Requiem, made a big impact when it was released in 2005. It was screened in the
Her mission to bring the plight of AO victims to the big screen has taken her all over the country. She visited A So Airport (A Luoi District,
"I came up with the idea of making the first film after my husband died," she says. Sakata’s husband Greg David died of cancer in 2003 when he was only 54.
David was a soldier in the American War in
Before their marriage, David told Sakata he could not have children because he had been exposed to Agent Orange during the war. "That was the only sad thing Greg told me about
When her husband died Sakata says she dealt with her grief by collecting information on Agent Orange. "I knew I had to come to
In 2004 she came to
"In
"I found victims everywhere. Children who were not even born then are suffering from all kinds of deformities and illnesses. In spite of such difficulties and poverty, everywhere I found love, caring, and warmth. Meeting the victims and their families helped me heal."