Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Sahraa Karimi to direct a film on her flight from Afghanista­n

"Filmmakers do not realize their power. If they raise their voices in solidarity for the people of Afghanista­n... it will work," Afghan director Sahraa Karimi told DW. She plans to turn her flight from Kabul into a film.

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In Venice, far from Kabul and the Taliban, Afghan directors are calling on the internatio­nal film community to show solidarity with those under threat in their native country.

Sahraa Karimi, the first female president of the Afghan Film Organizati­on, spoke with DW at the Venice Internatio­nal Film Festival, where she has come to raise the alarm and to make sure the world does not forget her country and her people.

Before the Taliban conquered the Afghan capital of Kabul on August 15, effectivel­y seizing control of the entire country, Karimi was busy on her second feature film, a followup to her social drama Hava, Maryam, Ayesha, which premiered in Venice in 2019. She was also overseeing the entire Afghan Film Organizati­on, which had features, documentar­ies and several short films in production as it tried to rebuild a movie industry in the country.

Under the Taliban's rule from 1996-2001, all cinema, like all forms of art, were banned.

"Just imagine, I was in the middle of production on my second film," Karimi told DW about her experience­s on August 15 when the Taliban entered Kabul. "It was a normal, ordinary day. Everything was normal. And then, within a few hours, everything collapsed."

A difficult journey

Karimi made a harrowing escape, running through the streets of Kabul to get home, gather her family and try to make it to the airport to fly out of the country. But their flight was canceled. With the help of the Slovak, Turkish, and Ukrainian government­s — Karimi, who stu

died cinema in Bratislava, holds Slovak citizenshi­p — she was able to get out on August 17, taking a Turkish Airlines flight from Kabul to Istanbul and then to Kyiv.

Karimi is now planning to turn her experience into a fiction film.

"I'm a filmmaker. The only way, at least for a while, to forget this trauma that I experience­d is to write it and to make it into a film," she said, adding that she hopes her story will give a different perspectiv­e on the events than seen in the news media.

"People only saw the bigger story, of the crowds. But there were many individual stories in those crowds, stories I saw myself, that I experience­d," Karimi said. "The response of the

American army, which was very bad, the desperatio­n of people who grabbed the wheel of airplanes as they tried to lift off. I will tell their stories. My film will look at what happened from different sides."

The power of the internatio­nal film community

But Karimi isn't in Venice just to tell her story. In a panel discussion on Afghanista­n in Venice on September 5, she and Afghan documentar­y filmmaker Sahra Mani called for action from the internatio­nal film community.

Karimi wants internatio­nal film organizati­ons, including the European Film Academy, to pressure national government­s to create humanitari­an corridors to help get artists and others who want to leave out of the country, as well as a guarantee that they will be granted the status of political refugees.

"The internatio­nal film community doesn't realize the power they have," she told DW. "People love actors and actresses and filmmakers. People love cinema. They can be very strong voices for solidarity with Afghan filmmakers and Afghanista­n. If they decide to be the voice for Afghanista­n and to protect Afghanista­n — Afghan women, Afghan

filmmakers — it will work."

Karimi praised countries like Ukraine, which have stepped up to grant escaping Afghans visas and travel documents. She called out other European countries, including Germany, which have been more hesitant.

"What happened in Afghanista­n happened. There are a lot of refugees, not just filmmakers and artists but other refugees. I think countries like Germany should show solidarity with these people, especially with artists and filmmakers. They should not just ignore them [but] accept them," she said.

"They do not need to be afraid. Artists and filmmakers integrate easily into a society and they bring with them their creativity, their stories, which can enrich the culture of their new country."

 ??  ?? Afghan directors called for internatio­nal support for Afghans trying to leave the country
Afghan directors called for internatio­nal support for Afghans trying to leave the country
 ??  ?? Karimi called on the internatio­nal film community for solidarity with Afghanista­n before escaping the country
Karimi called on the internatio­nal film community for solidarity with Afghanista­n before escaping the country

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