This PBS aired documentary speaks to the loss of rights by whites in Zimbabwe in particular whose farms and land has been confiscated and evictions enforced based on their being white and no longer desired according to their government. In this documentary, Then President Robert Mugabe makes the statement that he'd "like to be a Hitler ten times as much as the previous one was".
The documentary deals as well with the case of a truly kindly presenting white farmer who takes his case to the International Courts having lost his farm after spending twenty years paying it off. He is tearful
when the judgement is rendered.
A lot of grief has been visited upon whites as shown in the media
occasionally still in both Zimbabwe and South Africa by those wanting
them now gone.
This documentary sheds some light on the issues and feelings involved
with respect to the land grab aspect in any event and the open hostility expressed by many blacks towards the idea of a continued presence of farmers who are of European descent remaining there as they feel "it
is after all their land".
I watched this documentary initially through a free on-line service
provided through my local library (kanopy.com) and got this copy for
you - it 933MB in size