http://www.ted.com/talks/newton_aduaka_tells_the_story_of_ezra.html
Why you should listen
       to him:      
     
Born in Eastern Nigeria, Newton Aduaka and his family moved to 
Lagos in 1970 at the end of the Biafran War.  In 1985 he left for 
England to study engineering, but discovered cinema. He graduated from 
the London International Film School in 1990, and in 1997 established 
Granite Film Works. In 2001, Aduaka's debut feature film, Rage,
 became the first wholly independently financed film by a black 
filmmaker in the history of British cinema to be released nationwide. It
 opened to critical acclaim. He has made many short films as well. Between 2005 and 2007, he co-wrote, directed and executive-produced Ezra,
 his first non-independently funded film, for Arte France. The film won 
the Grand Jury Prize at several film festivals, including FESPACO, 
Durban, Amiens and Balafon, and was an official selection at Sundance 
and Cannes."Remembering the Biafra war and its transformative effect on his life, he reminds us, 'Africa should go forward, but we must look backwards so we don’t forget.'"Ethan Zuckerman, My Heart's in Accra

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