![]() |
| After the Arab Spring, people feel strong again |
This year's
uprisings in the Middle East have sparked interest in the Arab Film Festival
Berlin, which closes Thursday. Cinema buffs looked for explanations to the Arab
Spring, and found a good deal of optimism.
"Ben
Ali wanted to know everything about everyone, down to the last detail,"
says a protagonist in the Tunisian documentary "No More Fear," which
featured this week at the Arab Film Festival Berlin.
The
Tunisian president's way of finding out everything was to instill fear, to such
an extent that friends and family members no longer knew whether they could
trust each other. People were arrested on trumped-up charges, accused of being
terrorists or of endangering the state.
![]() |
| Information about the events was posted online by bloggers and amateur journalists |
In his
film, Mourad Ben Cheikh interviews a number of courageous activists, lawyers,
journalists and bloggers who refused to yield to the terror. He juxtaposes the
interviews with footage of the heady days of January when Tunisians took to the
streets to demand the resignation of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and his
government, and the last televised speeches of the president before he fled the
country he'd ruled with an iron fist for over two decades.
Renowned
Tunisian human rights lawyer Radhia Nasraoui, who defends victims of torture,
tells the filmmaker how she would always check that her brakes had not been
tampered with when she got into her car. She is defiant as she recalls how she
refused to give into intimidation the day her office was broken into and all
her files stolen, and how she danced the night away at a wedding, fully aware
that the police were watching her.
She laughs
as she remembers her month-long hunger strike to protest against the detention
of her husband, Hamma Hammami, the secretary general of the worker's communist
party. He in turn smiles as he looks back on his most recent stint in jail in
January when he feared he would be left behind chained to the bed as the guards
took to their heels.
Although
their stories are told with humor, there is a lingering sadness that so many of
their activist friends did not live to see the day Ben Ali fell, the day there
was "no more fear."
![]() |
| Mohamed Boazizi provided the spark for the Arab Revolution when he set himself on fire out of despair. Zine El Abidine Ben Ali visited him in hospital shortly before being toppled from power. |
Everything
is illegal
The absence
of fear is what characterizes the new Egypt, pointed out the young filmmaker
Amal Ramsis who began shooting "Forbidden" well before the January
uprisings began.
"We
had a feeling something big was going to happen because there was so much
despair, but we had not imagined this revolution," she said at the
festival in Berlin.
Ramsis'
ironic take in the film on everything that was forbidden in Egypt was finally
finished on the day the protests erupted on Cairo's Tahrir Square. "What
began as an act of protest against the government has become a document since
the revolution," she told Deutsche Welle.
![]() |
| In her film, Amal Ramsis deplores the amount of checkpoints and barriers in Egypt |
Ramsis had
deliberately decided to interview activists who were aware of the consequences
and knew she was making a political statement, because it would have been too
dangerous for her to go out onto the streets and talk openly about the
government with strangers. She did not apply for permission to shoot on the
streets, so right from the beginning she was doing something
"forbidden."
One of her
protagonists jokes that in Egypt you probably do between 10 and 15 forbidden
things a day. Another wonders whether there is anything that is not forbidden.
Holding hands in public, kissing, being out after dark, going to a museum,
leaving the house without identification, meeting friends in a restaurant, not
wearing a headscarf, forming a political party - practically everything falls
into the category of potentially being prohibited.
The
emergency law, which was enacted in 1958 and has been in place almost non-stop
ever since, extended police powers and legalized censorship, effectively
allowing the authorities to do anything in the name of state security,
including battering a blogger to death in an Internet cafe for refusing to show
his ID.
One of the
protestors' key demands was that the law be lifted, but this was not met.
"We had hoped we could change the system but now we realize the military
just wants to change the faces of the ex-regime," Ramsis said. "There
is another law against strikes. The emergency law has been extended. There is a
new law saying you can't criticize the military. We have the same situation,
the same forbidden things. Some 13,000 people have been jailed since Mubarak's
fall."
However,
there is one big difference, she added, and that is that the people feel much
stronger.
"I am
optimistic," said the filmmaker. "Millions of people are optimistic,
even if we are facing a very difficult moment. We know it's a transition period
and we have to be patient and it will be very long."
Normal
human beings
![]() |
| It took 18 days of protests for Mubarak to finally step down |
Another
positive sign, Ramsis said, was that the censors had given her official
permission to screen her film in Cairo. By contrast, although "18
Days," another film about the January uprisings, has received a warm welcome
at Cannes and other festivals across the world, it has not been shown in Egypt.
The
compilation of 10 stories that were "heard, experienced or imagined"
by 10 Egyptian filmmakers, who were asked in January to make a short film
without a budget and without remuneration, offers a more rounded and aesthetic
interpretation of the Arab Spring than the documentaries at the Berlin
festival.
The stories
range from the way a group of patients in a psychiatric ward reacts to the
"events," to a young girl who dyes her hair and joins the protests, a
young man who follows the uprisings on Facebook but doesn't get personally
involved, or to people who profit from the chaos.
The segment
entitled "Curfew" captures the madness and uncertainty that reigned
during that month of January in an ironic, touching manner. Filmmaker Sherif El
Bendary told Deutsche Welle he had felt honored to be part of the project, but
was not entirely sure what angle to take at first.
"I
thought about human beings, normal beings, and the impact of the revolution on
their normal lives," he said. "That's why I came up with the very
human situation of a grandfather and his grandson not being able to get home
because of the curfew and the fact that the military have blocked all the
roads."
Today, the
filmmakers and the rest of the world are uncertain as to the long-term impact
of the uprisings on the average citizens, but there seems to be a long-awaited
sense of optimism.
At the
opening of the Arab Film Festival Berlin, Director Issam Haddad welcomed
UNESCO's admittance of Palestine as an official member, saying it was a
"wonderful step towards peace in the region. We hope it will no longer be
the setting for killing and destruction, and that instead there will be
development and reconstruction and people will have more to laugh about."
Above all,
the hope is that there really will be no more fear.
Author:
Anne Thomas
Editor:
Kate Bowen





No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.