Josefin Kuschela, photographer and filmmaker at the Fritz Theater, spent six months with the northernmost people in the world.
What is it like to live in such a remote area where no trees grow, everything is frozen almost all year round and the ship only brings supplies to the supermarket once a summer? What is everyday life like for the Inuit, how do you travel with a team of Greenlandic sled dogs and spend the night comfortably at -30C? How do people manage the balancing act between their millennia-old traditions and the ever-increasing influences of our western world? And how does a woman from Chemnitz fit into all of this?
This evening will provide impressions of a journey that started at -35C and polar night in January and ended at a summery 0C and polar day in July - and where everything turned out differently than expected.
Attention - there will be a few dead animals to be seen. Hunting is an essential part of Inuit life.
Admission on a donation basis.
90- 120 min Photos and videos with a short talk and discussion