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The project New Realities highlights the power of technology

Even when the world has paused, women change makers are on a mission

Ashwini Doddalingappanavar Sourced by the Telegraph

Mathures Paul
Published 12.10.20, 09:38 PM

What’s the future of 360-degree filmmaking? With regular TV you have flat screens and we are just observers to a scene. Using 360-degree filmmaking, one can walk through the window and get a feel of the environment, besides having a presence in the scene.
Lenovo has worked on a project — during the global pandemic — that involves short films to capture the worlds of young women change makers around the world — India to Japan, Germany to the USA. New Realities, the project from Lenovo’s Intelligent Devices Group, has 10 films, each shot in 360-degree virtual reality and each of them capture voices from diverse communities, advocating change. Besides the films, Lenovo in partnership with GirlUp, is funding $100,000 in grants for these young women to pursue fields of study that align with their goals.

Visit newrealities2020.com to appreciate these short films

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Bridging the digital divide

Ashwini Doddalingappanavar is from a village in Karnataka. The 12 members in her family are all farmers and she has been brought up to believe that marriage is the most important aspect of her life. At the age of 15 her parents spoke about marriage but on her request the discussion was postponed for two years. The topic came up again. This time she decided to find her path. Leaving her family and her small world behind, she visited Deshpande Foundation to educate herself.

“I knew if I didn’t succeed I would be used as an example for other girls in the village,” she says. On getting her first salary (from her job at Meghsala Trust) she bought a smartphone and returned to her village where she teaches everyone — even her teachers — to use technology.

Making Ashwini’s journey special is the fact she had to shoot her 360-degree film (with help from a remote team) as the film crew couldn’t reach her village because of the pandemic. “I was scared to operate the camera and then upload the film,” she says. “Sometimes family and society go against you, when you do something different. But eventually they come around.”

Khady Dieng, France Sourced by the Telegraph

Building communities

Khady Dieng is a second-generation immigrant from Senegal and has dedicated her life to promoting digital inclusion for people who are disadvantaged. Her father left Senegal in the early 1970s and moved to France. Her work sees her engage with young and old, using technology to educate, build communities and create opportunities for those in an underserved area. “At times I feel hopeless but when I see people trust me, I find confidence to carry on and feel like doing more for them.”

Daze Aghaji, UK Sourced by the Telegraph

Fighting for the environment

Daze Aghaji was born and raised in a one-bedroom flat in north London. She had to leave behind a violent father and move to rural Lincolnshire and there was no looking back. The 20-year-old, who is studying history and politics at Goldsmiths University in south London, is also an Extinction Rebellion activist, a protest group that uses non-violent civil disobedience to campaign on environmental issues. She wants to show youngsters that they can stand up and bring about a change. Her film asks questions like what it is to be a young person fighting for climate change?

Kemi Dauda, USA Sourced by the Telegraph

Hope floats

Kemi’s Dauda, from the US, became interested in apps in her junior year. Her own education was characterised by rotting school ceilings, ripped books, and the total absence of teachers in some classrooms, so she turned to technology to educate herself. She launched her non-profit, Bringing Hope Back Home, last year. Her work involves helping young people to look at their future differently by using technology

Aisha Coulibaly, Italy Sourced by the Telegraph

Unity through diversity

Aisha Coulibaly, who is from Italy, learned at an early age about the challenges of immigration and grew up surrounded by different languages, religions, traditions and customs. In 2017, she founded MyGrants, an app that connects new immigrants with job opportunities and acts as a social network by mapping their talents, skills, interests, background, and potential. “My dad was a cultural translator and mediator. He spoke 12 languages but not Italian. He often told me to translate. My father died when I was 15 years old. This is when I started working. We decided to create a simple app,” says Aisha.

The other films

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