Experiencing Interruptions?

The Fires Project - Ich liebe Dich

Kayvan Mohammad vividly remembers the Halabja chemical attack in 1988 and aftermath. To this day, Kayvan is not only scarred emotionally but continues to suffer physically from the events.

Kayvan faces his hardship with unfailing optimism and in doing so provides a simple but powerful message.

Despite his family’s military roots, Gerhard Freilinger decided as a young child that he would become a surgeon. One day in 1988, Prof. Dr. Gerhard Freilinger received an urgent request to go to Vienna’s international airport to take custody of Iranians and Kurds arriving from the Middle East who had survived chemical weapons attacks.

  • Eric Vander Borght
    Director
  • Michael Luhan
    Executive Producer
  • Eric Vander Borght
    Camera / Editing
  • Magdalena Spalinska
    Public Outreach
  • Keith Powell
    Web Manager
  • Kyungsin Kim
    Dissemination
  • Project Type:
    Documentary, Short
  • Runtime:
    23 minutes 38 seconds
  • Completion Date:
    April 14, 2014
  • Production Budget:
    10,000 EUR
  • Country of Origin:
    Netherlands
  • Country of Filming:
    Austria
  • Language:
    Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian, Spanish
  • Shooting Format:
    Digital
  • Aspect Ratio:
    16:9
  • Film Color:
    Color
  • First-time Filmmaker:
    No
  • Student Project:
    No
Director Biography - Eric Vander Borght

Eric Vander Borght produces documentaries and corporate films.

30+ years of experience as independent producer, producer, cameraman, editor with/for:
OPCW • UNDP • United Nations • UNICEF • WTO • ICRC (International Committee of the Red Cross) • European Commission • Handicap International • All-TV • Belgian TV-RTBF/VRT • ARTE • TF1 • Radio Canada • NOS • Swiss TV-TSR and more

Consultant/coach to companies and film-directors on film-making and technical requirements.

Films directed/produced include

FIRES, A Teacher’s Mission
17 minutes
FIRES, Ich liebe Dich
24 minutes
FIRES, Buried Memories
25 minutes
FIRES, A Staff Trip
6 minutes
FIRES, Which Side Do You Belong To
18 minutes

God’s Footprint
26 minutes; a musical portrait of Madagascar; with Sylvain Van Holme
Pas de frontière pour les poissons (Fish without Frontiers)
52 and 26 minutes; portraits of French and Swiss customs officials in a small frontier village on the shores of Lake Geneva
Vanna's New Life
26 minutes; a portrait of Vanna, a young Cambodian girl who survived a landmine blast
Vanna
52 minutes; continuation of Vanna's portrait, filmed during one year
The Strength of Angels
1h20; full version of the above

Father Unknown (street children in Kingston, Jamaica)
Journey to the Centre of the Earth (men of Lesotho)
Black Women’s White Gold (women of Lesotho)
Women’s Stories (Tunisia in the Feminine)
Peace According to Husnieh (economic development in Palestine)
The Living Fields (working conditions in Cambodia)
Moon Walking (about mine-clearance expert Chris Moon)
A Profitable Business (micro credit in Cambodia)
The Mediator Monk (a Buddhist monk works with the UN)
After the Storm (mine clearance in Cambodia)
Carmen's Dance (Carmen Zubiaga helps the Cambodian disabled)

Films on which Eric worked as a creative consultant to the director include

Episode III, Enjoy Poverty by Renzo Martens (chosen to open the IDFA; Prix Ruban Canards, RIDM, Montreal; Flemish Culture Prize for Film; Stimulus Award, Dutch Filmfund, Amsterdam; etc.)
War Photographer by Christian Frei (Oscar nominee)
Tu ne verras pas Verapaz by An Van Dienderen and Didier Volckaert (Best Henri Storck documentary)
Josh's Trees by Peter Entell (Grand Prix du Jury, Montreal Film Festival).

Add Director Biography
Director Statement

The FIRES Project is all about transmission — like fires spread
Fire was the first chemical process mastered by humans. It is a source of well-being but also of destruction. Transmission of fears, transmission of knowledge, transmission of awareness… They all are fires burning and growing through history and generations, linking the past to the present.
Through captivating personal stories, which most of us can relate to, the Fires Project questions the spreads of feelings, like traumas, and ideas related to war and weaponry.

Fires are used to fight fire
The Fires Project also shows spreading of positive feelings, concrete actions and prevention to combat and eliminate chemical weapons.

Spread the Fires!
The films are freely available online to be used by anyone. Their length varies from 10 to 30 min. and are designed to be aired, projected, and shared — online and in the real world. To be used for broadcast, academics, NGOs, or simply at home.
A participatory experience, the project itself is like a fire, spreading out to its audience, who are invited to disseminate and give constructive input.

FIRES is a project of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
The FIRES Project is meant to draw public attention to the importance of issues of disarmament by showing personal stories of ordinary people.

FIRES are now live on THEFIRESPROJECT.COM