Upcoming Film Spotlights Plight Of Kids In Brick Kilns

Author: Zunairah Qureshi
1 min read

‘Under the Blaze’ presents a compelling tale of a child forced to trade his future for perilous conditions

Rawalpindi. A child extends his skinny arms to place a warm, rust-coloured brick in a long line of freshly baked blocks laid out to dry under the blistering sun that glares upon the kiln he has been slaving away at since the morning.

With six hours already gone by, there are eight more to go and around 100 more bricks to lug and stack into place.

As Awais approaches him, curious to get to know him, the child looks up in alarm and scampers away to go into hiding, afraid the police might show up and take him away from his job.

This is the story of just one of the 0.64 million children as reported by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics in 2023 whose plight and hardship prompted aspiring artist and filmmaker, Awais Shaukat, to tell their story through a hand-drawn animated short film titled, “Under the Blaze” which is expected to premiere next year.

The film will be a compilation of characters drawn on paper and digitally painted backgrounds, presenting a compelling tale of children forced to trade their futures for the hazardous conditions of labouring in Punjab’s formidable brick kiln industry. With careful consideration towards each detail in the 24 frames that are to be painted for each second of the film, the animation style is meant to capture the viewer through its beautiful art and evoke an emotionally sensitive response at the same time.

Speaking to The Express Tribune, Awais shared that the story for his film is inspired by his field visits to various brick kilns, where he observed the deplorable conditions and interviewed children who worked there, as well as their parents and some officials. “What I saw inside the kilns was totally different from what I thought goes on from the outside,” he said.

“I was able to learn about how the system fails in protecting these children and why authorities like the police don’t make a difference,” he explained. There are about 234 brick kilns in the Rawalpindi division and more than 7,000 in the Punjab province, which have continued to be on the radar for human rights violations.

The film hopes to bring the issue to light for a wider audience and prompt action.

The project is a testament to Pakistan’s growing animation industry, taking inspiration from Japanese-style storytelling and animation, with references such as the internationally acclaimed works of Makoto Shinkai and Studio Ghibli. In the wake of the recently, successful animated feature film, ‘The Glassworker’ by Mano Animation Studios, the short film shows promise of cementing the craft in the local context.

Awais Shaukat is a fine arts student and a painting major at NCA, whose vision is to carve a space for various art styles like hand-drawn animation in the Pakistani creative industry. The film is being produced by Rafhan Shaukat of Blacksmith Animation Studios.

Article published in the Express Tribune on 16th August 2024

Previous Story

Suspected Child Molesters Held In Kallar Syedan

birth
Next Story

Monsoon Brides: Extreme Weather Fuels Child Marriages In Pakistan

Latest from Blog

Cleft Children Fight for Treatment

Pakistan is confronting a serious but largely overlooked public health challenge, with thousands of children born every year with cleft lips and palates. Although the condition is treatable, many patients remain without timely care due to gaps in the healthcare system. Experts estimate that nearly 300,000 children are affected nationwide,…

8.6 Million Children Trapped in Labour

ISLAMABAD:  More than 8.6 million children in Pakistan are engaged in child labour, including over 6.6 million involved in hazardous work that threatens their health, safety and development, according to a national report launched on Thursday by the National Commission for Human Rights (NCHR) in collaboration with UNICEF. Titled ‘Pakistan:…

Sindh Healthcare Expansion Got Rs148b Funding

KARACHI: The Sindh government has earmarked more than Rs148 billion for hospitals, specialised medical institutions and emergency health services in the 2026-27 budget. The funding package focuses on expanding access to quality treatment, upgrading critical care facilities and enhancing emergency response systems amid growing healthcare demands across the province. According…

Rs620b Set Aside for Education in Budget

KARACHI: The Sindh government has allocated Rs620 billion for the education sector in the fiscal year 2026-27, covering both development and non-development expenditures for primary and higher education. According to the budget documents, an additional Rs24.75 billion has been earmarked for ongoing education schemes, taking the total allocation for these…

Climate Threat Looms Over Children

UNITED NATIONS: More than one billion children face at least three overlapping climate hazards, with 34 million in Pakistan, UNICEF warned Monday, while highlighting the disproportionate impact in some regions of the world. For the report, the UN agency cross-referenced data showing where the roughly 2.4 billion children on the…
Go toTop