Pray the Devil Back to Hell

World Premiere

USA | 72 MINUTES | English |

PRAY THE DEVIL BACK TO HELL

Female Director(s), Documentary

Winner of the Best Documentary Feature Award. Special Awards Screenings of this film will be held on May 4th (see schedule for details).
 
Charles Taylor was elected president of Liberia in 1996 and soon proved to be a corrupt dictator. Opposing warlords emerged from the North and raped, murdered, and terrorized the citizens of Liberia while Charles Taylor purportedly supported them in secret. The war killed 250,000 people and displaced one million citizens. With skillful eloquence, Pray the Devil Back to Hell tells the often overlooked story of how thousands of women in Liberia peacefully ended the country's second bloody civil war. Leymah Gbowee, a Liberian woman who witnessed both civil wars,had a dream: "To get the women of the church together to pray for peace." She invited ordinary mothers, grandmothers, aunts, and daughters from neighboring churches to start the Christian Women's Peace Initiative. Asatu Bah Kenneth was one of Leymah's first supporters. She happened to be Muslim. Determined to make peace, they asked, "Does the bullet know Christian from Muslim?" They dressed in pure white and sat by the thousands to protest the war. When peace talks in Ghana came to a standstill, the women literally formed a physical barricade around the building and didn't allow the men to exit until a deal was bartered. The women of Liberia are proof that nonviolent and peaceful protest isn't just a fantasy-it can be a triumphant reality. Their work culminated in the election of Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, Africa's first elected female head of state. "Pray the Devil Back to Hell eloquently captures the power each of us innately has within our souls to make this world a far better,safer, more peaceful place," wrote Desmond Tutu. Indeed, director Gini Reticker has made a commanding, inspiring, and emotionally stirring documentary about the futility of war and the splendor of peace.


CAST & CREDITS

Directed by Gini Reticker

Gini Reticker is the Oscar®-nominated director of Asylum, a short about a Ghanaian woman who fled from female genital mutilation. She produced and directed the Emmy Award-winning Ladies First (for PBS's Wide Angle), focusing on the role of women in rebuilding Rwanda. She directed The Class of 2006, about the first 50 women in Morocco to graduate from an imam academy in Rabat; A Decade Under the Influence, winner of an award from the National Board of Review; Out of the Darkness: Women and Depression, winner of both an Emmy and a Gracie Award; and Blazes of Light, which received a Gracie Award and an Emmy nomination. Reticker earlier edited films like Roger & Me, The Awful Truth: The Romantic Comedy, and Fire From the Mountain.

Editor
Kate Taverna
Producer
Abigail E. Disney
Vocals
Angelique Kidjo
Composer
Blake Levh
Principal Cast
Leymah Gbowee, Etweda "Sugars" Cooper, Vaiba Flomo, Asatu Kenneth, Janet Johnson-Bryant, Etty Weah
Director
Gini Reticker
Director of Photography
Kirsten Johnson
Co-Producer
Johanna Hamilton