Silvia Broome [Nicole Kidman]: Everyone who loses somebody wants
revenge, on God if they can't find anyone else. But in Africa, in
Matobo, the Ku believe that the only way to end grief is to save a
life. If someone is murdered, a year of mourning ends with a ritual
that we call the Drowning Man Trial. There's an all-night party beside
a river. At dawn, the killer is put in a boat. He's taken out on the
water and he's dropped. He's bound so that he can't swim. The family
of the dead then has to choose. They can let him drown or they can
save him. The Ku believe that if the family lets the killer drown,
they'll have justice but spend the rest of their lives in mourning.
But if they save him, if they admit that life isn't always just...
that very act can take away their sorrow.
-- Martin Stellman and Brian Ward (story),
Charles Randolph, Scott Frank, and Steven Zaillian (screenplay)
The Interpreter (movie, 2005). Directed by Sydney Pollack.