Posts Tagged ‘Volker Schlondorff’
Documentary movies on civil wars
Posted by: adonis49 on: August 18, 2009
Documentary movies on civil wars; (Written in 2005 and posted on August 17, 2009)
I am mining my diary.
From September 21 to 25, 2005, The City Theater (Masrah El Madina), in Hamra (Lebanon) and located at the former movie theater called Saroula, exhibited documentaries from different regions of the world dealing with civil wars.
These documentaries of about 90 minutes each and free of charge covered the start of the civil war in Lebanon between 1975-76 by Volker Schlondorff and called “Circle of Deceit”, and from Bosnia by Laurent Becue-Renard entitled “War-Wearied”, then about Rwanda by Anne Aghion, and about Chechnya by Johann Freidt, then about Kurdish Iraq close to the border with Turkey by Bahman Ghobadi called “Turtles can Fly”, and culminating with the atrocities of Sabra and Chatilla, initiated by Israel while occupying Beirut in 1982, by Borgmann, Slim and Theissen.
I attended the first two and the last two documentaries and missed the ones on Rwanda and Chechnya because my back pain exacerbated and prevented me from driving my shift car; I could not convince anyone to drive me there, a 30 minutes drive, and to join me to watch these rare showings.
I liked “Turtles can Fly” best among the ones that I was fortunate to see. This documentary show how the Kurdish children, mostly crippled, in a refugee camp manage to follow a leader their age in order to survive by organizing themselves in groups removing land mines and selling them.
The 14 years old leader falls in love with a 13 years old refugee girl from Halabja (the town that they say Saddam pounded with poisonous gas). You must know the town in Iraq bordering Iran which was exterminated chemically by Saddam Hussein during his war with Iran.
The girl has been raped in her destroyed home town by a few Iraqi soldiers then gave birth to a blind boy whom she hates and tried at least 4 times to murder her child only to be saved by the children.
She succeeded by drowning her bastard child and then jumped from a cliff. The whole camp and surrounding towns were relying on the kid leader to provide them with a satellite dish in order to follow the impending war by the USA against Saddam Hussein only to be faced by news in English.
I guess the cable Al Jazeera must have been a mane for them, later on, because it provided coverage in Arabic. The movie ends by the proclamation of the fall of Saddam and the return of refugees to their hometowns.
The documentary about the massacre of Sabra and Chatilla tries to extract eye witness testimonies from 7 Christian militias who participated in the massacre. The perpetrators claimed that, in the beginning, they were ignorant wretched kids of 15 when they were driven to take part in the war and they are still wretched adults and still addicted to drugs and as poor as can be.
They were addicted to Neoprene, LSD, and half a dozen drugs which were abundant during the civil war and were actually distributed freely.
These murderers affirm that Israel planned this massacre to the minutes details, providing transportation, logistics, driving the bulldozers, digging the huge pit near the Camille Chamoun stadium to bury the more than 2000 dead bodies, providing the plastic bags for the last three layers of bodies dumped in the pit and the chemicals to squelch the putrefied odors and lighting the areas during the night for the militias to resume their rampage.
At 6:30 a.m. the next morning these killers witnesses a few of their colleagues executing Palestinians over the pit, ordering the living Palestinians to throw the dead into the pit, knowing very well that they are next to be shot.
One of the killers was a butcher by profession and he opted to slaughter his victims.
One of the murderers kept a vivid picture of slain beautiful horses and wondering why innocent animals had to be killed.
The orders came directly from Israeli officers and the high command of the Lebanese Forces, among them Elie Hobeika, Maroun Meshaalani, and George Malek.
Maroun ordered them that every one in the camp is to die, man, women and newly born babies so that Elie Hobeika could construct a fine garden in these razed places.
Most of the killers were trained in Israel for at least 6 months before Israel invaded Lebanon in 1982.
One of them said that, at one point, in their military training in Israel they were driven to Eilat to a nude beach.
One morning, a female Israeli officer showed up stark naked and ordered them to undress completely for the morning training. These fighters have never seen a naked girl before and were utterly embarrassed to obey such an order, but they ended up jogging totally naked along the length of the nude beach.
They claimed that they feared their fathers and would have respected their dads’ orders but unfortunately, it was their fathers who encouraged them to pursue war trainings and get involved in the fighting.
We have to pity these mothers who married the worst kind of husbands; more on that first showing of the film later on.
The film on Bosnia review the psychological rehabilitation of 4 mothers, for a whole year, in a special surrounding after their husbands and families were massacred.
After the rehabilitation they were supposed to go back to their home town to restart their lives. Now, consider the wonder of the Lebanese experience of sending back people to their home towns just because money has been disbursed for reconstructing their destroyed homes. Why do you think only 13% returned?
Joanna has started her European tour on the first of the month and will last for the duration of the month. She purchased her Schingen train ticket in Lebanon for about $600.
Janna will be visiting Germany where she will drop her girl friend at the university then on to Belgium, then France, then Italy, then Spain, then Holland for an interview to a graduate graphic design program next year, and back to Paris and lastly returning from Germany.
She has been forwarding e-mail news from time to time but I got the news from her mother (sister) Raymonde when she is in a talkative mood.
It appears that Joanna wrapped her arms with toilet paper so that they let her in the Vatican, and after another failure to enter she crossed over to the nearby merchant, cursed him for his high priced shawls that are not worth a dime, then paid him 3 euros for a shawl instead of 15, then snatched it and fled inside the Vatican.
She was invited by a taxi driver at Venice to stay overnight at his house and he gave her a tour of Venice the next morning for free.
By the way, taxi drivers take home 600 euro a day. No doubt that this exclusive trip on the canals will be the most memorable adventure in her life.
Cedric has been working his ass off as a trainee in the management program at the Sheraton Hotel in Verdun. He finally got a sort of a girl friend. He spent a whole day at her bungalow in Delb Country Club and took her to Kfarselwan, a summer retreat of his uncle Nicolas.
Kfarselwan is 1600 meters above sea level and Cedric slept over night under a genuine nomad “bedouin” huge tent made of goat skins. I did not ask him if she slept over too.
William spent at least a whole week, days and nights, backing up his hard disks and those of Joanna’s. He used up 43 DVDs’ for that purpose, each with a capacity of 4.7 gigabytes.
Most of the files are audio-visual, digital photos, animations and graphic and architectural design projects. My more than a thousand pages of word processing files would occupy a meager space on a lousy CD.
The LAU engineering departments at Byblos is hard pressed this year. There are no enrolments, even for major courses and thus might cancel many required course this fall.
The industrial engineering department hired a visiting professor to teach operations research courses; these courses were taken away from full time faculty members.
I told the chairman that I can generate 50 students to enroll in my elective course of “Risk assessment and occupational safety” if they offer it this fall, but it was clear that they didn’t considered this course to fit strictly in an engineering program. They will create a new course called “Reliability” to fill the quota for a faculty member.
I called up the chairman of engineering at AUST and told him that I could teach 5 of his courses in the BS curriculum. He told me that these courses are slated to be graduate courses and not about to be offered any time soon.