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In the 2018 film Capernaum, the darkest moment for the lead character, Zain, occurs when he is forced by extreme desperation to sell baby Yonas to a human trafficker named Aspro.
While Zain suffers throughout the film—living in squalor, being forced to sell drugs, and watching his beloved 11-year-old sister Sahar be sold into marriage for chickens—the selling of Yonas represents his absolute rock bottom.
After Sahar is taken and Zain runs away, he is taken in by Rahil, an undocumented Ethiopian migrant. When Rahil is arrested and fails to return, Zain (only 12 himself) becomes the sole caretaker for her infant son, Yonas. For several weeks, Zain demonstrates incredible resilience, using a skateboard and a pot as a makeshift stroller to navigate the streets of Beirut and "scamming" for food and supplies.
However, the "darkest moment" arrives when Zain is evicted from their shack and has no way to feed Yonas. Exhausted and facing starvation, he makes the heart-wrenching decision to hand Yonas over to the forger/trafficker Aspro. He does this not for greed, but because Aspro promises a "better life" for the baby and offers Zain the forged papers he needs to flee to Sweden. The scene is physically and emotionally harrowing; Zain is seen dragging the baby through the streets and ultimately walking away with tears streaming down his face, having compromised his own moral core of protectiveness to survive.
Zain "overcomes" this darkness by reclaiming his agency through a radical act of defiance: suing his parents.
No oversights detected.
In Capernaum (2018), the lead character Zain's darkest moment is when, facing eviction and starvation, he gives the baby Yonas to the human trafficker Aspro in exchange for the promise of a better life for the child and passage to Sweden for himself. He overcomes this moral and existential low point by suing his parents for "giving him life," an act that reclaims his agency and gives him a voice. The publicity and legal proceedings from his lawsuit lead to the exposure of Aspro's trafficking ring, resulting in the rescue of Yonas and his reunion with his mother, Rahil. The film ends with a symbolic victory: Zain obtains his official ID card and smiles for the photo, asserting his existence and identity.