SYML
Flags
Flags tells the true story of Sapna, a 10-year-old girl living in India below the poverty line suffering from blood cancer.
Each week she would take an 8 hour overnight train journey in order to reach a hospital where treatment is affordable.
This film was shot in January, 2020. On October 1st, 2020, Sapna passed away.
Director
Jorik Dozy
Producer
Sean Lin
Cinematographer
Nicholas Chin
Credits
Directed by
Jorik Dozy
Producer
Sean Lin
Line Producer
Purvi Makwana
Co-Producer
Sil van der Woerd
Cinematographer
Nicholas Chin
2nd Camera Operator
Debesh Mehrotra
Camera Assistant
Skaiste Kazragyte
Colorist
Keidrych Wasley
Special Thanks
Mr. L.K.Chhajer, Acharya Tulsi Shanti Prathisthan
Acharya Tulsi Regional Cancer Treatment & Research Institute
Sh. S.K.Srivastava - DRM, North Western Railway, Bikaner & Mr. Sunil Joshi - Sr DSO and all staff of Bikaner Division
Dr. Pankaj Tantia and Dr. Vivek Kareer
Thank you to Anil Kumar, Manpreet Kaur & Sapna for sharing your story.
“Flags” by SMYL 2020
Fighting Spirit
Sapna passed on October 1st, 2020. As she leaves us, we feel a responsibility to make sure she is never forgotten. Her story teaches us about the fragility and inequality of life and that it is worth fighting to improve everyone's quality of life.
We can only hope that by sharing Sapna's story her memory lives on and we can continue to be inspired by her beautiful fighting spirit.
Cancer Capital
CANCER, the world’s 2nd leading cause of death, is alarmingly prevalent in the farming region of Malwa, India. The region has seen such a fast growing number of cancer patients that it is known as the Cancer Capital of India.
An average of 136 people per 100,000 suffer from the disease, exceeding the national average of 80 per 100,000. Everyday, an average of 18 deaths happen in this region due to cancer.
Studies indicate excessive and unregulated use of pesticides on food crops as the leading cause. As a result, farmers and their families live in a cesspool of toxicity that also contaminates the water they drink and bathe in.
Most of the people affected are living under the poverty line and can't access treatment near their homes. This causes around a hundred patients a day to take an 8 hour overnight train ride to the city of Bikaner to visit Acharya Tulsi Regional Cancer Treatment and Research Institute where cancer treatment is affordable.
Production
Rarely have we covered a topic and subject as heartbreaking and personal as this. Sapna was an incredible 10-year old girl. In the brief time we spent with Sapna, we experienced a rich slice of her young life. No matter how sick she was, her strength was evermore visible as she fought through any obstacle in her path.
All of the scenarios and locations are as real as it gets, almost nothing was controllable and we therefore had to be in the right place at the right time. The hospital receives over one thousand patients a day and only has 17 doctors and not enough beds. The doctors do an incredible job to cope with such a huge volume of patients but many people end up having to travel back home right after receiving treatment since there is no room to stay overnight.
The overnight train, known as ‘The Cancer Train’ is a train for the underprivileged in India and due to overcrowding people will spend the journey wrapped in blankets, sleeping on the floor. I am sure our crew made the journey for the passengers quite a bit more entertaining than their usual commute. Whether we would be taping black paper on the train’s ceiling lights to control the lighting or be hanging out of the door of the moving train to get an exterior shot, many passengers would smile and point at us as we tried to get our shots.