Friday, May 22, 2026

Review: ‘Faya Dayi’ observes rural Ethiopia and the crop that transfixes its people

Filmmaker Jessica Beshir’s bending, swaying nonfiction journey “Faya Dayi” explores rural Ethopia by way of the production and consumption of the chewable narcotic leaf called khat an approach not in the traditional manner of an issue documentary or informational travelogue, however, but as a state of mind to be received. That drug, in other words, called cinema. Yes, there are harvesters, packagers and users speaking to us, and a camera that captures a community dependent on and wary of its grip. Yet in eschewing directness of intent for the artful massaging of space, sound and rhythm, Beshir’s film a very personal project for the Mexican Ethiopian director, which she shot over 10 years stakes a richer claim to our sense of the place and the effect of its most lucrative crop.
The black-and-white photography is tenderly textured even in its starkness, as evocative with a diaphanous curtain in sunlight as with people working at night, and the nature all around them. It’s also a melancholic indicator, however, that while this is a beautiful culture, it’s in the grip of a monochrome economy that’s swallowing everyone. “Everyone chews to get away,” one boy’s voice-over tells us. “Their flesh is here but their soul is gone.” The bustle of khat’s reaping in the fields, bundling in packed warehouses and selling on the streets is not unlike the plant’s stimulating effects one source of energy in the film, while interiors with transfixed chewers and ritualized users (it’s been a Sufi pathway to transcendence for centuries) create another mood entirely.
The heartbeat of Beshir’s film, though, is with its wandering young narrators people looking for a way out of a homeland they love and worry for. Her threading of their collective searching presence, like lonely guides navigating an encompassing, self-medicated haze, is what gives “Faya Dayi” its dignifying, transfixing intimacy and what renders it unlike any other documentary you’re likely to see.
(LA Times)

Hot this week

Production up, but the ‘cost’ variable weighs heavily

Production is up in 2021 for the Italian agricultural...

Luminos Fund’s catch-up education programs in Ethiopia recognized

The Luminos Fund has been named a top 10...

Well-planned cities essential for a resilient future in Africa concludes the World Urban Forum

The World Urban Forum (WUF) concluded today with a...

Private sector deemed key to unlocking AfCFTA potential

The private sector’s role is vital to fully unlock...

Addis Ababa hosts AABS 2026 Conference for first time in Ethiopia

The future of African business education and economic transformation...

India’s Africa policy needs sustained engagement, not periodic summits

One of the persistent weaknesses of the India-Africa Forum...

Fall in Love with Impact, Not Your Organization”: The Development Sector’s Toughest Lesson

The Mastercard Foundation, a Canadian organization, celebrated its 20th...

University of Gondar, Mastercard Foundation scholars advance disability inclusion

A decade-long partnership between the University of Gondar, Queen’s...

Name: Tamiru Moges

2. Education:    Marketing Management (BA Degree) 3. Company name: B-Creative Marketing...

“Country Ownership Begins with Women’s Leadership”

In Ethiopia’s ongoing effort to strengthen its health system,...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img
Previous article
Next article