On the outskirts of Quetta, Pakistan, a Hazara filmmaker turns his camera on his own family as they navigate life inside a besieged refugee community. Once forced from their homeland in Central Afghanistan, they now live under constant threat from Taliban violence, clinging to everyday rituals and the dreams of two young daughters who embody their hope for the future. At once intimate and poetic, Hazara Town is a meditation on exile, resilience, and the enduring strength of love in the face of uncertainty.
Khadim Dai is a Hazara filmmaker from Afghanistan, currently living in Los Angeles, CA having completed his BFA in Film and Video at the California Institute of the Arts. His family fled to Quetta, Pakistan when he was two years old to escape Taliban persecution of the Hazara people. He lived most of his life as a refugee in Pakistan, and after surviving the bombing of his school in 2013 where 126 friends and classmates were killed, he fled on his own to Indonesia from where he tried in vain to reach Australia and join his brother. There he lived as a refugee for three years and started documenting his experience. Khadim has been making documentary films since 2014, including his work as a cinematographer and co-producer for The Staging Post in collaboration with Australian director Jolyon Hoff and as a cinematographer for Chasing Asylum directed by Eva Orner. His films have been shown at the Van Abbe Museum, Ian Potter Museum of Art, QUT Art Museum, and at the REDCAT.