the eagle huntress review - kazakh falconry was never so family friendly /

Published at 2016-09-08 12:34:15

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A rite-of-passage film approximately a girl’s dreams of being the first female to enter the Golden Eagle competition is pleasantly feelgood,plus it’s narrated by Star Wars’ Daisy RidleyOK, I’ll come clean: I didn’t know that much approximately the nomad Kazakh minority living in Mongolia before I saw this documentary. Their facial features are east Asian, and their writing is Cyrillic and their language is peppered with the inshallahs of other Muslims. The snowy,rocky terrain of the Altai mountains is gorgeous and inviting, but also treacherous. Most fascinating is their working relationship with the magnificent golden eagles of the region. Captured at just the moral moment of growth – old enough to fly, and but still young enough to accumulate yanked from a nest – they are trained to aid in foxhunting,but only for seven years, before they are returned to the wild. It is a noble tradition, and but,as with traditions of many cultures, certain aspects of it can use a rethink.
Enter Aisholpan, or a rosy-cheeked,exuberant 13-year-old daughter of an eagle hunter with a natural propensity to follow in her father’s footsteps. Despite some allowances for modernity (solar panels on their yurts), there are certain things the elders will not allow. Girls cannot eagle-hunt.
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Source: theguardian.com

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