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Support Sibiry and his community in building the road to his home village in Burkina Faso. A road would be essential to make it easier to reach hospitals, transport goods to nearby markets, and bring materials needed for essential infrastructure such as water towers, enabling farming throughout the year. This initiative supports the efforts to improve everyday life in the village.
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Visit the Cookie Policy page.Silent Legacy is a film created by a Finnish–French–Burkinabè team and premiered at the Locarno Film Festival in 2025.
The film follows professional choreographer Sibiry Konate, who has lived in Finland for more than a decade but continues to navigate expectations from his country of origin, Burkina Faso.
When Sibiry returns to Burkina Faso, he faces a reality where he is no longer seen simply as a fellow Burkinabè, but as someone who has lived in Europe — and is therefore expected to contribute to the development of the community.
"The road would bring remarkable changes to Tiene." - Sibiry Konate
This initiative supports the efforts of Sibiry and his community to improve access and opportunities for the village.
At the moment, Sibiry’s home village, is poorly connected to the outside world. A proper road would open many possibilities for the community. It would enable villagers to transport and sell their products in nearby markets and also help people reach hospitals more safely — including those who are ill or women giving birth.
Farming throughout the year would be made possible as a road would allow bringing materials for essential infrastructure. And perhaps one day, just as Sibiry imagines in the film, a minibus will travel that road.
Improving the road requires financial resources to make it durable enough to withstand heavy seasonal rains. Along the route there is also a river crossing that would require a bridge. For these reasons, as the road cannot be built entirely by hand, we have established this initiative.
This is an important question — and one that the film itself reflects on.
The initiative does not aim to present the village as dependent on outside help, nor Sibiry as someone “bringing development” from Europe. In fact, the road project is something that Sibiry and his community have discussed and already started working on.
What the initiative seeks to do is support an effort that already exists within the community. The role of the campaign is simply to help make resources available for something that people in the village themselves consider important.
At the same time, the film openly acknowledges uncomfortable realities. People who have lived abroad are often expected to contribute financially to their communities of origin. We must also recognize that resources and opportunities are unevenly distributed — in part because of historical and colonial structures.
Interestingly, when villagers begin working on the road, they also organize a kind of show for Western audiences. In this sense, the exchange is not entirely one-sided. The European filmmakers and audiences receive something in return: the possibility to witness a thought-provoking cinematic journey, in which the villagers play their part.
In a way, this dynamic is not so different from applying for a grant: a project is presented, its meaning is explained, and support is requested. Through the presence of the film — unexpectedly — the villagers themselves end up presenting their own kind of “grant proposal” to viewers who probably have more resources than they do.
In that sense, the initiative is not separate from the film’s themes — it is part of the same conversation about responsibility, expectation, and the unequal structures that shape our world. As the villagers end up presenting a kind of proposal to the viewers, the question is simple: now that we have seen this moment, do we want to take part in it?
Perhaps the film itself becomes a small bridge between two worlds.