China Daily

Syrian refugee kids act, direct, ‘escape’

Film project helping them shape own stories about life in the camps

- AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

BEIRUT — “Three, two, one, action!” shouts Syrian refugee Mostafa Abdallah, 11, energetica­lly directing his fellow child actors in a musical being filmed in a camp in the Lebanese capital.

Members of the cast spring into action, belting out a chaotic but charming rendition of a traditiona­l Arabic folk song about love and loss, accompanie­d by tambourine­s.

The musical is part of the Refugee Film Project, an initiative by internatio­nal organizati­on SB OverSeas that is helping Syrian refugee children in Lebanon write, direct and act in their own short movies.

Since Syria’s conflict erupted in 2011, its children have often been center stage in heartbreak­ing images capturing the brutality of the war or the tragedy of the ensuing refugee crisis.

But the Refugee Film Project aims to turn the camera around, giving young refugees the chance to shape their own stories — including from behind the camera.

Every day for six weeks, around 30 child actors gathered in front of the Bokra Ahla (A Better Tomorrow) NGO, which provides education services in Shatila, a Palestinia­n camp in Beirut.

Mostafa turns away from the digital camera just long enough to say: “In the past, I used to film from my cellphone. But here, we learned how to film on camera — we learn a ton and have so much fun.”

A year and a half ago, he and his family fled the northern Syrian town of Manbij, held at the time by the Islamic State group, and eventually made their way across the border into Lebanon.

More than one million Syrians — including over 500,000 children — are registered in Lebanon as refugees.

Many live in informal camps on agricultur­al land, but others settled in urban Palestinia­n camps like Shatila, whose original population of 10,000 people has swelled with the arrivals of Syrians fleeing the conflict.

The project has already produced several films, including a horror story about three witches and Betrayal in Beirut, a six-minute tale of love, kidnapping, and greed.

It is the brainchild of British teacher Aphra Evans, 24, and filmmaker Shyam Jones, 25, who work with the children to come up with storyboard­s and scripts.

“Then we come to school and organize the kids to act, use the camera, and ... rehearse their lines,” says Jones.

Once shooting is complete, “we edit the film at home and show it to the kids, then they get to see themselves on screen being little actors,” says Jones, who was on his first trip to Lebanon.

The children are able to escape the grim reality of camps like Shatila while filming, Evans says, while viewers are impressed by the actors’ enthusiasm, creativity and unexplored talent.

Thirteen-year-old Hanadi al-Hajj Abdallah is one of those children.

Her fingernail­s painted a firetruck-red, she plucks at her oud — the pear-shaped stringed instrument beloved in the Arab world.

“We’re using the oud in our scene today, and this is the first time I’ve played it on camera. When I play, I feel like a huge star,” Hanadi said.

 ?? JOSEPH EID / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Tahani al-Shaalan, a 9-year-old Syrian refugee, films her friends as they perform in Shatila as part of a program called the Refugee Film Project, an initiative that teaches children how to write, direct and act in their own movies.
JOSEPH EID / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Tahani al-Shaalan, a 9-year-old Syrian refugee, films her friends as they perform in Shatila as part of a program called the Refugee Film Project, an initiative that teaches children how to write, direct and act in their own movies.

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