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Through imagery, the film, Baraka, shows the diversity of the way people approach spirituality, religion, life and death, the struggle for survival and so on. ...
Baraka is an ancient Sufi word, which can be translated as “a blessing, or as the breath, or essence of life from which the evolutionary process unfolds. ... Everyone will have his or her favorite images or scenes from Baraka. ... A few of the many other places Baraka visits are the Ayers Rock in Australia; the ancient pyramids of Egypt; St. ... I agree with Fricke when he said that “Baraka” was intended to be “a journey of rediscovery that plunges into nature, into history, into the human spirit and finally into the realm of the infinite.”
Baraka has no story and no dialogue, but somehow, it manages to deliver a sensual experience that I have found unforgettable.
Approximate Word count = 1043 Approximate Pages = 4.2 (250 words per page double spaced)
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