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In my experience, reading statistics about poverty has a unique effect on people. It creates a slight rise in blood pressure as people read about ā€œ1 billion living in slums,ā€ but then the effect dissipates as the enormity of that numberā€”1 billionā€”seeps in. ā€œI donā€™t know any of those people. Itā€™s just a statistic, just a number,ā€ we seem to tell ourselves.

Wrapping our brains around some of the huge issues of the day is a struggle, especially when those issues are given to us in print. But what if we stripped away the glaze of statistics and got more visceral, more real, more personal?

Thatā€™s what some of my students and I have tried to do in making The Fourth World, a documentary produced by Prairie Grass Productions of Dordt College. We filmed individual slum dwellers in Guatemala City, Manila, Nairobi, Mumbai, and Managua to help tell the stories of the ā€œ1 billionā€ people we sometimes hear about.

In Manila we spent a week with a family who lives under a bridge near a garbage dump. They are Jose and Elvie Alquino, and their oldest daughter, Jovelyn, wants to be a nurse. In Nairobi we filmed Felix, a 16-year-old boy who works eight hours a day for 17.5 cents an hour. In Guatemala City, Tanya begs at a busy intersection. Her story forever changed the film crewā€™s attitude towards beggars.

Itā€™s almost impossible for filmmakersā€”students or notā€”to come away from such experiences without being deeply moved. People who live in slums have names, dreams, aspirations, and personalitiesā€”just like we do. Working with Christian organizations in the areas where we filmed, we were able to zero in on individuals, not statistics.

Paraphrasing Chaim Potok, ā€œThe universal is made known in the specific.ā€ Documentaries can do an excellent job of telling specific stories to help us understand the macro-story.

THE LOWDOWN: More documentaries that will open your eyes.

: A photographer gives cameras to children of brothel workers to help them document their lives and express themselves. (Think Film)

: Ministry in ā€œLa Limonada,ā€ an enormous slum in Guatemala City, brings healing to people who had given up hope. (Athentikos)

: A young man in Ghana with a deformed leg bikes around the country to help raise awareness and build relationships in a culture that ostracizes those with disabilities. (First Look Pictures)

: An artist leads an art project using materials salvaged from a landfill in Brazil. See a fuller review .

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