The Scotsman

Scotland-malawi partnershi­ps provide routes for potential to grow

The film of William Kamkwamba’s inspiring story of learning how to harness the wind proves Malawi’s prospects, says David Hope-jones

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Scotland’s longstandi­ng friendship with Malawi was celebrated in style at an exclusive Scottish screening of the inspiring new film by Chiwetel Ejiofor, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind, which is set and filmed in Malawi.

The night before its global launch on Netflix, reaching 190 million worldwide, the Scotland Malawi Partnershi­p hosted a special evening with 350 guests from across Scotland and Malawi.

A packed red carpet lined the pavement into Edinburgh’s Dominion cinema as friends, colleagues and supporters of the many people-to-people partnershi­ps between Scotland and Malawi joined to celebrate the 160-year-old friendship between the two nations.

Dressed in traditiona­l Malawian or Scottish attire, guests enjoyed an evening of live Malawian music, Malawian drinks and an exclusive screening of the critically acclaimed film.

Andrea Calderwood, the film’s producer, spoke to a captivated audience after the screening, talking about her experience as a Scot filming in Malawi.

“We’ve been delighted at the way audiences at the Sundance and Berlin Film Festivals have responded to the beautiful film we were able to make with our team in Malawi, and very pleased that the Scotland Malawi Partnershi­p is giving audiences

in Scotland a chance to experience the film on the big screen in advance of its global Netflix launch”, she said.

The story follows William, then 13, who lives with his family in rural Kasungu where he attends school regularly and shows great aptitude for his studies. Yet after land developmen­t and poor weather leads to a meagre harvest, famine strikes the village, alarming the community and forcing William to drop out of school when his father can no longer afford the fees.

Determined to find a way out of the life-threatenin­g situation his family is facing, William sneaks into the school library to research building a windmill-powered pump to irrigate the land. The emotional journey of a father and his exceptiona­l son at its heart, William’s tale captures the incredible determinat­ion of a boy whose inquisitiv­e mind overcame every obstacle in his path.

The exclusive Scottish screening, which was sponsored by Orbis Expedition­s, began with a special video message from William Kamkwamba himself, introducin­g the film and speaking about Malawi’s special friendship with Scotland.

The film is the directoria­l debut of Academy Award® nominee and Bafta Award winner Chiwetel Ejiofor, who also wrote the screenplay and has been working on the project for eight years. Ejiofor also stars as William Kamkwamba’s father in the film, which is a collaborat­ion between Netflix, the BBC, the British Film Institute (with National Lottery funding) and others. It is a Potboiler Production.

The Scotland Malawi Partnershi­p used the evening to highlight some of the 1,200 different partnershi­ps between Scotland and Malawi, including many directly relevant to William Kamkwamba’s amazing story.

Speaking in his traditiona­l tribal dress as a Malawian Chief, Edgar Kapiza Bayani, Country Director of Community Energy Malawi, told the audience about his work with Malawian communitie­s helping generate sustainabl­e energy solutions. His Scottish counterpar­t, Nicholas Gubbins, Chief Executive of Community Energy Scotland, spoke about Scotland’s unique contributi­on to the Community Energy Developmen­t Programme.

The audience also heard from Ciara Commins, Climate Challenge Programme Malawi Programme Manager at Scottish charity SCIAF, who spoke about this Scottish Government funded project which works with almost 50,000 people in southern Malawi to improve access to food, water and energy through a community-led approach.

Ciara Commins said: “I am just back from malawi, having spoken to countless people who are benefit ting from

this inspiring partnershi­p. In many ways, the resilience, innovation and community drive in The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind can be seen right across Malawi, including in our own partnershi­p. With the right opportunit­ies, Malawi’s potential is bright.”

The Scotland Malawi Partnershi­p represents a community of 109,000 Scots with active links to Malawi and a shared history that dates back 160 years to dr david living stone. it is estimated that over 44 percent of Scots

can name a friend or family member with a connection to Malawi.

Core funded by the Scottish Government, the Partnershi­p coordinate­s, represents and supports a diverse spectrum of links between the two countries, including half of Scotland’s local authoritie­s, every Scottish university and most of its colleges, 250 primary and secondary schools, dozens of different churches and faithbased groups, hospitals, businesses, charities and NGOS, and a wide range of grass-root community-based organisati­ons.

William Kamkwamba’s incredible true story has been inspiring Scots and Malawians, young and old, for more than a decade. It is a story of dignity, resilience, youth leadership and community action – all of which we see today in the thousands of peopleto-people links which unite Scotland and Malawi.

The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind is now available on Netflix. David Hope-jones OBE, Chief Executive, Scotland Malawi Partnershi­p, www.scotlandma­lawipartne­rship.org

 ??  ?? 0 Musician David Luhanga, producer Andrea Calderwood, David Hope-jones, Kephus Misanjo of the Malawi Associatio­n and Douglas Young, vice chair of the SMP at the film’s Scottish screening
0 Musician David Luhanga, producer Andrea Calderwood, David Hope-jones, Kephus Misanjo of the Malawi Associatio­n and Douglas Young, vice chair of the SMP at the film’s Scottish screening
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