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Burkitt review: Belfast filmmaker's look at legacy of NI medical pioneer is deeply personal and moving
Burkitt review: Belfast filmmaker's look at legacy of NI medical pioneer is deeply personal and moving

Belfast Telegraph

time22-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Belfast Telegraph

Burkitt review: Belfast filmmaker's look at legacy of NI medical pioneer is deeply personal and moving

Éanna Mac Cana's documentary on Fermanagh-born surgeon Denis Burkitt is a moving piece of film, featuring his own experience of Burkitt lymphoma In a sense, Éanna Mac Cana's lyrical and intimately personal documentary Burkitt (TG4, Wednesday, May 21) is really two stories with an unusual connection blended artfully into one. Mac Cana, from Belfast, was a 19-year-old student studying filmmaking in Manchester in 2017. At home for the summer, he was diagnosed with the relatively rare cancer Burkitt's lymphoma.

‘Burkitt' review: A lyrical, deeply personal look at the legacy of an Irish medical pioneer
‘Burkitt' review: A lyrical, deeply personal look at the legacy of an Irish medical pioneer

Irish Independent

time22-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Independent

‘Burkitt' review: A lyrical, deeply personal look at the legacy of an Irish medical pioneer

Belfast filmmaker Éanna Mac Cana's documentary on Irish surgeon Denis Burkitt is a moving piece of film, featuring his own experience of Burkitt lymphoma Today at 21:30 In a sense, Éanna Mac Cana's lyrical and intimately personal documentary Burkitt (TG4, Wednesday, May 21) is really two stories with an unusual connection blended artfully into one. Mac Cana, from Belfast, was a 19-year-old student studying filmmaking in Manchester in 2017. At home for the summer, he was diagnosed with the relatively rare cancer Burkitt's lymphoma.

Burkitt review: Beautiful documentary about life of pioneering Fermanagh cancer researcher
Burkitt review: Beautiful documentary about life of pioneering Fermanagh cancer researcher

Irish Times

time21-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

Burkitt review: Beautiful documentary about life of pioneering Fermanagh cancer researcher

There's more than one way to tell the story of a pioneering Irish medic, and for his chronicling of the life and times of Co Fermanagh cancer researcher Denis Burkitt, film-maker Éanna Mac Cana has opted for a beautifully surreal and almost feverish documentary. Burkitt ( TG4 , Wednesday) is a dreamlike film full of unmooring and eye-catching imagery – rooted in Mac Cana's personal experience of undergoing treatment in 2017 for Burkitt's lymphoma, the condition that Burkitt first identified while working with the British Colonial Medical service in Uganda. There are layers and layers to Burkitt. But Mac Cana never loses sight of his central mission, which is to set out the essentials of the medic's life. He begins with Burkitt's childhood in rural Fermanagh and then explores his criss-crossing of Africa and his determination to discover the cause of the cancer of the jaw and mouth that he found among children he was treating in Uganda. But the film isn't just history. It contextualises Burkitt's contribution to medicine through the prism of Mac Cana's chemotherapy sessions at Belfast City Hospital. And it poses questions about colonialism – leaving open-ended the issue of how an Irishman from a British-ruled part of the island ended up in Uganda in the twilight of the UK's exploitation of Africa. That the story is relayed in Irish adds another gloss of subtext. That sounds like a lot, and in the hands of a less adept film-maker, Burkitt could have been a mess. But Mac Cana pulls off the balancing act wonderfully, blending a stark traditional music soundtrack with poetic narration. 'I began learning about you. Denis Burkitt, your name, my cancer,' he says early on – a line that hits like an invocation or a prayer. READ MORE Dr Denis Burkitt being interviewed at the Hilton Hotel, Sydney, in February 1980. Photograph: Adrian Greer Michael Short/Fairfax Media via Getty Images Archive footage of Burkitt suggests a passionate and down-to-earth surgeon. He talks about his father – Fermanagh's county surveyor - and his enthusiasm for birdwatching and how he became one of the leading contributors at the time to 'British ornithology'. Devoutly Christian, Burkitt's faith led him to Uganda – along with his wife, Olive – where he saved hundreds of lives. Burkitt was also a keen photographer, and Mac Cana traces his life with these images of Fermanagh, England (where he met Olive during the war), and Uganda's vast, lush expanses. These biographical components are set alongside fragmentary recollections of Mac Cana's cancer treatment – a journey portrayed as deeply halluctionary, as if his body were haunted by forces beyond its comprehension. 'The scan was clear but the treatment had taken its toll,' he says. 'I became scared to open my mouth and see a lump inside.' Burkitt ends with a grainy image of a woman walking away from the hospital, taken from the window of the director's ward. It seems to be his mother, but Mac Cana never clarifies. Like so much else in this mesmerising documentary, it is left to the viewer to work out - one more enigma in a film that brims with mystery yet also paints an authentic and straightforward portrait of Burkitt as one of the great unheralded Irishmen of the 20th century.

'Learning Irish for my film helped with cancer recovery'
'Learning Irish for my film helped with cancer recovery'

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

'Learning Irish for my film helped with cancer recovery'

A Belfast filmmaker has said learning Irish for a documentary exploring his rare cancer allowed him to "take back control" of his illness. Éanna Mac Cana underwent months of intensive treatment for Burkitt's lymphoma - a cancer affecting the lymphatic system - after discovering a lump at the back of his throat. It is named after Fermanagh-born Dr Denis Burkitt, who had discovered the cause of the disease while carrying out medical work in Uganda in the 1950s. Mr Mac Cana said he struggled to look in his mouth after treatment, but learning certain Irish pronunciations was a form of physical therapy. "I was accessing all these different parts of my mouth and I was saying all of these specific things... and it was actually through the Irish language that I was taking control again of my actual mouth," he told BBC News NI. Mr Mac Cana was finishing his first year at university in Manchester in 2017 when he first discovered the lump. "[In] first year you're kind of partying hard, going out and having fun and I thought maybe I was just burning the candle at both ends," he said. It was only after he returned home and the lump began to bleed did a biopsy confirm his Burkitt's lymphoma diagnosis. He began a long, intensive treatment cycle, spending the summer as an inpatient at Belfast City Hospital while undergoing chemotherapy. "I was living this life and having a very normal university experience and then you get this spanner in the works and it changes everything," Mr Mac Cana added. After finishing treatment, Mr Mac Cana said it was a challenging time but wanted to use his creativity to explore his emotions, filming excerpts of his time spent in the ward. "I really felt like at the time I was living day-to-day, I could not see beyond the next few days," he added. "I wanted to get back to normal but the ground had changed underneath me." While Mr Mac Cana was given the all-clear following treatment, the five-year wait to be fully discharged caused anxiety but in 2021, he picked up a book with a chapter dedicated to Dr Burkitt. Dr Burkitt served with the Royal Army Medical Corps in east Africa during World War Two, and continued his medical work in Uganda after the conflict. In 1957, he was asked to examine a boy who had tumours in his jaw, which led to Dr Burkitt travelling hundreds of miles of travel around east Africa, and the discovery that the lymphoma was driven by a viral infection. After gathering archive footage of Dr Burkitt's work in Africa from his family, Mr Mac Cana began to piece together this with his own treatment clips into a short film. Having previously completed some projects in Irish, Mr Mac Cana took on a new challenge of re-learning the language alongside his teacher, Breandán Ó Fiach. "After hospital I found it really difficult to look inside my mouth because the lump was back there," he said. He found accessing parts of his mouth to be "very powerful". "I was with Breandán one day and he was teaching about where to place certain syllables and how to access them. "I remember saying certain words and I was using different parts of my mouth and it just felt like I was taking control of it again." "I owe the Irish language a lot," he added. Mr Mac Cana said he was delighted the film would add to a growing scene of films featuring the language. "The Irish language itself is a really healing tool, it was like a form of treatment," he said. During research for the film, Mr Mac Cana found many similarities between himself and the Burkitts. "On the first page [of the book], it described this link between Denis Burkitt's father's bird work in County Fermanagh and how he mapped the birds inspired how Denis would map Burkitt's lymphoma across Africa," he explained. "I had an affinity with birds because my name means bird in Irish. "I thought it was an interesting connection and really fascinating to me that something here in Ireland could inspire something on a different continent." Dr Burkitt's eldest daughter, Judy Howard, was contacted by Mr Mac Cana in 2022 and from there an "incredibly strong friendship" was formed. "Because my dad had died back in 1993, and we've given all our emotional and physical attention to our mum then for such a long time until her death… for Éanna to arrive on our doorstep and sort of resurrect our dad with us just remade us as a family," she said. "He feels like a part of our family." Mrs Howard and her sister Cass attended the documentary's Belfast premiere last summer, where they watched it in full for the first time. But the most emotional moment came two months ago, when Mr Mac Cana travelled to their Gloucestershire town for a community screening. "To see it with 50 members of our immediate family and friends from our childhood that came out of the woodwork... was just mind-blowingly extraordinary," she said. While the film highlights Dr Burkitt's seminal work in childhood cancers, Mrs Howard said her father's research about fibre and bowels were "prophetic". "I just hope he would be remembered primarily as an Irishman, his heart was always in Ireland," she added. "A man of faith and integrity and always asking the question why with his twinkly eyes and soft Irish voice… he could speak truth to power as a humble, good gentleman." Burkitt is set to air on TG4 on Wednesday 21 May at 21:30 BST. Tribute to childhood cancer treatment pioneer

Éanna Mac Cana: Filmmaker says learning Irish helped with cancer recovery
Éanna Mac Cana: Filmmaker says learning Irish helped with cancer recovery

BBC News

time19-05-2025

  • Health
  • BBC News

Éanna Mac Cana: Filmmaker says learning Irish helped with cancer recovery

A Belfast filmmaker has said learning Irish for a documentary exploring his rare cancer allowed him to "take back control" of his illness.Éanna Mac Cana underwent months of intensive treatment for Burkitt's lymphoma - a cancer affecting the lymphatic system - after discovering a lump at the back of his is named after Fermanagh-born Dr Denis Burkitt, who had discovered the cause of the disease while carrying out medical work in Uganda in the Mac Cana said he struggled to look in his mouth after treatment, but learning certain Irish pronunciations was a form of physical therapy. "I was accessing all these different parts of my mouth and I was saying all of these specific things... and it was actually through the Irish language that I was taking control again of my actual mouth," he told BBC News NI. Diagnosis a 'spanner in the works' Mr Mac Cana was finishing his first year at university in Manchester in 2017 when he first discovered the lump."[In] first year you're kind of partying hard, going out and having fun and I thought maybe I was just burning the candle at both ends," he was only after he returned home and the lump began to bleed did a biopsy confirm his Burkitt's lymphoma began a long, intensive treatment cycle, spending the summer as an inpatient at Belfast City Hospital while undergoing chemotherapy."I was living this life and having a very normal university experience and then you get this spanner in the works and it changes everything," Mr Mac Cana added. After finishing treatment, Mr Mac Cana said it was a challenging time but wanted to use his creativity to explore his emotions, filming excerpts of his time spent in the ward."I really felt like at the time I was living day-to-day, I could not see beyond the next few days," he added. "I wanted to get back to normal but the ground had changed underneath me." While Mr Mac Cana was given the all-clear following treatment, the five-year wait to be fully discharged caused anxiety but in 2021, he picked up a book with a chapter dedicated to Dr Burkitt served with the Royal Army Medical Corps in east Africa during World War Two, and continued his medical work in Uganda after the 1957, he was asked to examine a boy who had tumours in his jaw, which led to Dr Burkitt travelling hundreds of miles of travel around east Africa, and the discovery that the lymphoma was driven by a viral infection. Irish language 'a form of treatment' After gathering archive footage of Dr Burkitt's work in Africa from his family, Mr Mac Cana began to piece together this with his own treatment clips into a short previously completed some projects in Irish, Mr Mac Cana took on a new challenge of re-learning the language alongside his teacher, Breandán Ó Fiach."After hospital I found it really difficult to look inside my mouth because the lump was back there," he said. He found accessing parts of his mouth to be "very powerful"."I was with Breandán one day and he was teaching about where to place certain syllables and how to access them."I remember saying certain words and I was using different parts of my mouth and it just felt like I was taking control of it again.""I owe the Irish language a lot," he Mac Cana said he was delighted the film would add to a growing scene of films featuring the language."The Irish language itself is a really healing tool, it was like a form of treatment," he said. During research for the film, Mr Mac Cana found many similarities between himself and the Burkitts."On the first page [of the book], it described this link between Denis Burkitt's father's bird work in County Fermanagh and how he mapped the birds inspired how Denis would map Burkitt's lymphoma across Africa," he explained."I had an affinity with birds because my name means bird in Irish."I thought it was an interesting connection and really fascinating to me that something here in Ireland could inspire something on a different continent." Film 'remade' Burkitt family Dr Burkitt's eldest daughter, Judy Howard, was contacted by Mr Mac Cana in 2022 and from there an "incredibly strong friendship" was formed."Because my dad had died back in 1993, and we've given all our emotional and physical attention to our mum then for such a long time until her death… for Éanna to arrive on our doorstep and sort of resurrect our dad with us just remade us as a family," she said."He feels like a part of our family." Mrs Howard and her sister Cass attended the documentary's Belfast premiere last summer, where they watched it in full for the first the most emotional moment came two months ago, when Mr Mac Cana travelled to their Gloucestershire town for a community screening."To see it with 50 members of our immediate family and friends from our childhood that came out of the woodwork... was just mind-blowingly extraordinary," she said. Proud Irishman While the film highlights Dr Burkitt's seminal work in childhood cancers, Mrs Howard said her father's research about fibre and bowels were "prophetic"."I just hope he would be remembered primarily as an Irishman, his heart was always in Ireland," she added."A man of faith and integrity and always asking the question why with his twinkly eyes and soft Irish voice… he could speak truth to power as a humble, good gentleman."Burkitt is set to air on TG4 on Wednesday 21 May at 21:30 BST.

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