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Arts & Culture

Sacred

India Holi
Courtesy of Saumyananda Sahi / © WLIW LLC
India Holi

Airs Monday, Dec. 10, 2018 at 11 p.m. on KPBS TV

Become immersed in the daily use of faith and spiritual practice around the world

At a time when religious hatred dominates the world’s headlines, the feature-length documentary “Sacred,” explores faith as a primary human experience, revealing how people across the world turn to ritual and prayer to navigate the milestones and crises of private life.

Premiering nationwide Monday, Dec. 10, 2018 on PBS, “Sacred” embarks on a global journey of spirituality, tracing religious ritual at birth, adolescence, marriage, death and other key moments of human life.

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Academy Award-winning director Thomas Lennon commissioned or sourced contributions from top international filmmakers in order to capture more than 40 diverse stories from 25 countries – never once leaving his New York office.

Sweeping in its global reach, yet intensely intimate, the film is a tour de force that unifies these disparate scenes into a single work, told without narration, without experts and, for long stretches, without words at all.

Haiti. Become immersed in the daily use of faith and spiritual practice in more than 25 countries. At a time when religious hatreds dominate headlines, explore faith as primary human experience, and how people turn to ritual and prayer to navigate life.
Courtesy of Guetty Felin / © WLIW LLC
Haiti. Become immersed in the daily use of faith and spiritual practice in more than 25 countries. At a time when religious hatreds dominate headlines, explore faith as primary human experience, and how people turn to ritual and prayer to navigate life.

“Today, not many people would dispute the importance of religion,” said director Thomas Lennon, “But we in media usually look at it socially and politically. Here the goal is to plunge the viewer into a series of private experiences of faith and hopefully the intensity of that encounter shakes up our reactions, triggers something fresh.”

India Kumbh Mela
Courtesy of Courtesy of Jeremiah Kent / WLIW LLC
India Kumbh Mela

Setting the stage for the journey, “Sacred” opens with a monk embarking on his Kaihogyo, a 1,000-day walk around Mt. Hiei in Japan.

Continuing with a young Muslim father from Cairo chanting the call to prayer to his baby, who is only minutes old, the film’s approach is both lyrical and linear as it drives forward in time: from the initiations of infancy (bris, baptism and more) to coming-of-age ceremonies in Mandalay, Jerusalem and the San Carlos Apache Reservation, featuring boys and girls at the cusp of adolescence.

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In Spain and then India, the film encounters teenagers as they lean on their faith to navigate the most intimate pressures of their lives: the strains between two parents and the prohibitions of dating.

The film travels through marriage and the trials of adulthood through to the rites — some of them solemn, others riotous and drunken — by which we remember and honor our dead.

“Sacred” has screened at numerous festivals across six continents, including DOC NYC, Frozen River Film Festival, International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA), Montclair Film Festival, Sarasota Film Festival, Sebastopol Documentary Film Festival, Spirit Film Festival and Tokyo International Film Festival.

It was also shown at the RiverRun International Film Festival, where it won the Special Jury Prize.

Wedding in China.
Courtesy of Courtesy of Zou Su (SUSAN) / WLIW LLC
Wedding in China.

Watch On Your Schedule:

The film will be available to stream on demand the following day.

Join The Conversation:

"Sacred" The Movie is on Facebook, and you can follow @SacredTheMovie on Twitter. #SacredFilmPBS

PBS is on Facebook, Instagram, and you can follow @PBS on Twitter.

Credits:

A WLIW LLC production for WNET in co-production with Japan’s WOWOW. Thomas Lennon is director and producer. Jessica Wolfson is co-producer. Julie Anderson and William F. Baker are executive producers. Stephen Segaller is executive in charge. Maeve O’Boyle is supervising editor. Nick August-Perna and Maeve O’Boyle are editors. Music is by Edward Bilous.