Overview
In 1966 a coal slag heap collapsed
on a school in south Wales, killing 144 people, most of them children.
Poet Owen Sheers has given voice to those who still live in Aberfan, the
pit village in which tragedy struck, and uses their collective memories
to create a striking work of poetic power.
This is a portrait
not just of what happened, but also of what was lost. What was Aberfan
like in 1966? What were the interests of the people, the social life,
the sporting obsessions, the bands of the day? What was the deeper
history of the place? Why had it become the mining village it was, and
what had it been before the discovery of coal under its soil? Perhaps
most significantly: what is Aberfan like today?
The Green Hollow
is a historical story with a deeply urgent contemporary resonance; a
story of what can happen when a community is run by a corporation. It is
also a story known along generational rather than geographic borders.
Based on the BBC One production, The Green Hollow is a beautifully rendered picture of a time and place - and a life-altering event whose effects are irrevocable.