Mo Harawe

Mo Harawe

Historia

Mo Harawe was born in Mogadishu. Since 2009, he has lived in Vienna, where he began making films. He attended numerous film workshops and made five short films that have won awards at international festivals. He also works as a screenwriter and his feature film script To Mogadishu, developed at the Diverse Geschichten script lab, won the Dor Film award at the Diagonale in 2016. In 2019, Harawe won the BKA Startstipendium for his new feature film, The Village Next to Paradise, now in development.

Perfil

Mo Harawe

PelĂ­culas

Will My Parents Come to See Me
Producer
An experienced Somali policewoman again accompanies a young prison inmate through the procedures of the Somali justice system.
Will My Parents Come to See Me
Writer
An experienced Somali policewoman again accompanies a young prison inmate through the procedures of the Somali justice system.
Will My Parents Come to See Me
Director
An experienced Somali policewoman again accompanies a young prison inmate through the procedures of the Somali justice system.
Life on the Horn
Writer
For over a decade, toxic waste has been dumped illegally on the coastline of Somalia. The earthquake and tsunami in 2004 damaged the toxic containers and spilled waste, which caused the spread of diseases. Many people left their villages but some stayed and lived with the consequences.
Life on the Horn
Director of Photography
For over a decade, toxic waste has been dumped illegally on the coastline of Somalia. The earthquake and tsunami in 2004 damaged the toxic containers and spilled waste, which caused the spread of diseases. Many people left their villages but some stayed and lived with the consequences.
Life on the Horn
Producer
For over a decade, toxic waste has been dumped illegally on the coastline of Somalia. The earthquake and tsunami in 2004 damaged the toxic containers and spilled waste, which caused the spread of diseases. Many people left their villages but some stayed and lived with the consequences.
Life on the Horn
Director
For over a decade, toxic waste has been dumped illegally on the coastline of Somalia. The earthquake and tsunami in 2004 damaged the toxic containers and spilled waste, which caused the spread of diseases. Many people left their villages but some stayed and lived with the consequences.
The Village Next to Paradise
Director