Saturday Star

Theories go up in smoke with vaping

Film-maker sets light to facts that could save ‘A Billion Lives’

- NONI MOKATI

THE jury may still be out on vaping, but documentar­y film director Aaron Biebert believes that it could save lives.

A Billion Lives is his hard-hitting short film that’s being aired at the fifth annual Jozi Film Festival at Rosebank’s Cinema Nouveau.

Biebert’s film takes on what he calls the relentless efforts by pharmaceut­ical companies, anti-smoking advocacy groups, tobacco companies and government­s around the world to distort infor mation about vapour technology.

“We have known for a long time that the burning of tobacco creates all the carcinogen­s that are not good for our bodies. With vaping, there is none of that.

“The technology behind vaping machines is not new and we all know that it does not involve tar or harmful substances. However, there are people who don’t want this truth to come to light,” he said.

Biebert, who flew across four continents to promote the documentar­y, said while he has never touched a cigarette or tried an e-cigarette, he had experience­d immense loss in his life.

It’s what prompted him to make the film.

A colleague and a mentor of his was diagnosed with lung cancer a few years ago and later died.

“As he got cancer I noticed he kept smoking and I always thought that was so silly. For someone to keep doing something that was ending their life was tough to watch. He deteriorat­ed very quickly. It was devastatin­g.

“Now, if you think about a billion people going through that, one realises the importance of telling the public about alternativ­es such as vapour smoking,” he said.

A Billion Lives received the Supreme Jury Prize and Best Director awards at the 2016 Melbourne Documentar­y Film Festival and continues to cause waves at various internatio­nal film festivals.

Biebert said he didn’t anticipate the positive response. His film does market vaping products heavily, but he said: “I’m not an advocate for these companies, but I am an advocate of trapped smokers who want to quit.”

The documentar­y also features interviews with leading scientists, doctors, technologi­sts, policy-makers and health organisati­ons, including two South African doctors who speak on the relevance of vaping in today’s society.

“My wish is that everyone who watches this documentar­y understand­s there is an alternativ­e out there and they don’t have to die early,” said Biebert.

 ??  ?? The burning of tobacco creates all the carcinogen­s that are not good for our bodies, says film director Aaron Biebert. With vaping, there is none of that, though there are those who don’t want this truth to come to light, he says
The burning of tobacco creates all the carcinogen­s that are not good for our bodies, says film director Aaron Biebert. With vaping, there is none of that, though there are those who don’t want this truth to come to light, he says

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa