The Secret Life of Your Clothes
Documentary in which Ade Adepitan explores the afterlife of some of the clothes we donate to charity shops. He follows the trail to Ghana, the biggest importer of our castoffs.
In Britain we give thousands of tons of our unwanted clothes to charity shops every year. But where do they actually go? It turns out most don't ever reach the rail of the local charity shop, they are exported to Africa. And even though we have given them away for free, our castoffs have created a multimillion-pound industry and some of the world's poorest people pay good money to buy them.
In this revealing film for 麻豆社 Two's This World, Ade Adepitan tells the fascinating story of the afterlife of our clothes. He follows the trail to Ghana, the biggest importer of our castoffs. One million pounds' worth of our old clothes arrive here every week. Ade meets the people who make a living from our old castoffs, from wholesalers and markets traders to the importers raking in a staggering 拢25,000 a day. But not everyone is profiting.
With cheaply made western clothes flooding the market, the local textile industry has been decimated. Ade visits one of the last remaining cloth factories and finds it on its knees. And the deluge of our clothes isn't just destroying jobs, it has also had a seismic effect on Ghanaian culture. Western outfits are fast replacing iconic West African prints and traditional garb. Ade travels to remote villages to find everyone wearing British high street brands.
Last on
'I could be on any high street in the UK but I鈥檓 not, we鈥檙e in a small village in Ghana.'
Clips
-
Ade meets Dina, a single mum who sells clothes for a living
Duration: 02:22
-
Ade arrives in Accra
Duration: 01:59
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Ade Adepitan |
Series Producer | Sarah Waldron |
Executive Producer | Sam Bagnall |
Making This World
This World film-makers tell their behind the scenes stories about making the programme.