Film ‘Enterprise Shelter’ (1982)
Film ‘Enterprise Shelter’ (1982) brings us to Amsterdam of the 80s where we witness the life and poor living conditions of recently arrived from Suriname groups of migrants. One of the central character of the film is a private house owner who rents houses to migrants with low or no income. He receives from the government unemployment support of his tenants in order to cover the rent expenses. The rest of the unemployment support goes to migrants but quite some sums are lost on the way and end up in pockets of this middleman - the private house owner. As plot unfolds film director and activist Andre Reeder visits houses of Suriname migrants that really look like shelters, interviews and films the house owner during his business or leaser time and conducts interviews with city representatives that manage housing and financial support of migrants. In ‘Enterprise Shelter’ Andre Reeder managed to unwrap a complicated knot when private housing sector representative can find a loophole in the legislative state housing system and in migration policy to develop his enterprise on expenses on Suriname groups of migrants.
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