Description
Inside the Marseille immigrant detention centre (CRA), doctor Reem Mansour provides general medical advice for the migrants waiting to be repatriated. Their life is in standby. No one knows the destiny awaiting tomorrow. The woman does her best to help them, trapped in a system that represses those in need of help. Emmanuel Roy managed to cross the barrier of the detention centre, the policed bastion set up by French immigration policies, with a camera to reveal that which seems to be a flaw in the repression apparatus, i.e., a safe space of humanity and confession. The film director collects the many testimonies, always pointing the camera towards the doctor. I Don’t Know Where You Will Be Tomorrow decries the fine mesh of a contradictory power that entraps people and becomes an accomplice of abuse but, at the same time, offers a glimpse for those who, within a system, make an effort to create spaces of resistance.