Impact Days Catalogue
By Madeleine Leroyer and Madeleine Leroyer

#387

A hoodie, pants, a belt. That’s what little is left of #387, one of the 800 migrants who perished on April 18, 2015 off the Libyan coast. On the military base in Melilli, Sicily, forensic pathologist Cristina Cattaneo leads the largest identification operation ever undertaken to date in the Mediterranean region. For the April 18, 2015 disaster, she listed at least 15 countries of origin. On the field, in the smallest villages of West Africa, ICRC’s anthropologist Jose Pablo Baraybar meets the families who lost someone to collect every possible ante mortem information. From both sides of the Mediterranean Sea, our characters gradually converge into the matrix of the search for identity. The film embraces their promise to help the families of the missing to find closure and put a name on a grave. What is so unique about this “treasure of identity”? What’s the value of one’s life? Who are they? Who are we? Who will we be together?

Sections : Impact Days, Impact Days
Country : Italy, Senegal, Mauritania, Germany, Switzerland
Original languages : English, Italian, Amharic, Tigrinya, Bambara, Soninke
Directors
Madeleine Leroyer
Madeleine Leroyer (France)
Producers
Valérie Montmartin
Valérie Montmartin (France)
LITTLE BIG STORY
Completion
June 2019
Impact Statement
#387 is the starting point of the campaign #numbersintonames aimed at promoting the right to identity and dignity, after death, for all the victims of the Mediterranean crossings. It will stand for the rights of their families to know. Together, we can turn more numbers into names.

Since 1993, at least 52'760 people have died trying to reach Europe. The campaign born from #387 aims at helping identification efforts and promoting the rights of missing persons and their families. #numbersintonames
Impact Goals
  1. Engaging the audience into supporting DNA collection and matching to bring answers to more families.
  2. Screening a special cut of the film in 15 countries of origin and refugee camps, with “tool-boxes” for the families of the missing.
  3. Reviving the Central Tracing Agency.
Impact Strategy
  • First created in 1870 to find prisoners of war, the CTA (Central Taking Agency) could become the leading international actor to assist the families of missing migrants. The campaign will advocate for that among policy makers.
Contact
Primary contacts
Valérie Montmartin (France): vmontmartin@lbstory.fr
Madeleine Leroyer (France): madeleine.leroyer@gmail.com
Participants present at the Impact Days
Madeleine Leroyer (France)
Valérie Montmartin (France)

OAK Foundation
SOS Mediterranée
La Cimade
Help Doctors
EPRIE
Good Pitch
Boats 4 People
UNITED for intercultural action
Korea Verband

OAK Foundation
SOS Mediterranée
La Cimade
Help Doctors
EPRIE
Good Pitch
Boats 4 People
UNITED for intercultural action
Korea Verband