Jung (War) in the Land of the Mujaheddin background

Jung (War) in the Land of the Mujaheddin

2001NR1h 54m8

A film about a group of compassionate doctors who struggle to start and operate basic hospital facilities in wartorn Afghanistan.

Jung means war in the Dari language. It is a word laden with meaning for the Afghan people. The war has shaped their day-to-day living, becoming a brutal normality, even mistaken for the essence of life itself. Jung is a narrative documentary which follows the human and professional adventure of its protagonists. A war surgeon has an important project: To set up an emergency hospital for civilian war victims. He is accompanied by an old war correspondent who has been reporting from Afghanistan ever since the Soviet invasion. The first act is the survey mission carried out in February 1999. The city of Charikar is chosen as the designated site for the construction of the hospital. But in July 1999 a sudden Taliban attack forces the Mujaheddin army and the civil population to a desperate escape. An emergency site is found in the village of Anobah, in the Panshir Valley. The third act of the account (February-May 2000) bears witness to the life of the hospital with its daily tragedies, in the hope of a possible alternative to the madness of war.


Info about Jung (War) in the Land of the Mujaheddin

Studio(s): Karousel Films, Elleti & Co.

Originally Released: Jan 01, 2001

Production Country: Italy

Budget: $275,000.00

Genres:Documentary, War