Arab News

Aleppo filmmaker vows to continue showing reality of Syria

‘World is deaf and blind ... as Syrians, our goal is to continue to tell and share Syria’s story’

- AFP London AFP

A Syrian filmmaker whose documentar­y on the siege of Aleppo brought a Cannes audience to tears has said she wants to show the world the reality of her country.

Waad Al-Kateab’s powerful and intimate film “For Sama” is a love letter to her infant daughter, documentin­g the desperate conditions she and her husband were living through, in case they didn’t survive.

Charting five years of her life from student protester to wife and young mother in Syria’s battle-ravaged second city, it won an emotional standing ovation at the Cannes film festival in May.

For Kateab, the film is more than the story of one family’s struggle. “It’s a realistic depiction of everything that’s happening now in the country,” she told AFP on Wednesday in London, where the documentar­y is touring.

“Unfortunat­ely, the world is deaf and blind to what is happening, but as Syrians, our goal is to continue to tell and share Syria’s story.”

Kateab was just 20 when prodemocra­cy protests broke out, triggering a bloody crackdown by loyalists of President Bashar Assad that has killed 370,000 people and displaced millions.

The northern city of Aleppo suffered some of the heaviest fighting after opposition­rebels seized its

THROUGH THE LENS

eastern sector in 2012.

The young filmmaker’s goal was to document the desperate conditions of life in the city as regime forces closed in — along with the joy of falling in love and the excitement of becoming a mother.

When she and her husband Hamza, on a trip to Turkey to see his sick father, heard regime forces were poised to cut off the city’s east completely, they decided to return. Within an hour, they had packed and were on a treacherou­s journey, dodging shells and sneaking past regime troops into the now-besieged part of the city.

Hamza, a medic, threw himself into work at a hospital which at one point hosted 300 casualties in a single day — before itself being hit by an airstrike.

Kataeb dedicated herself to filming the situation, while wrestling with the question of whether or not to flee the city to protect her daughter. After six months, Aleppo was overrun and they were forced into exile, leaving the city as part of a huge civilian evacuation.

Kataeb then set about bringing her footage together into a featurelen­gth production that would capture the imaginatio­n of audiences “tired of war films or films on Syria.”

 ??  ?? Syrian director Waad Al-Kateab poses during a photocall at the 72nd edition of the Cannes Film Festival in France.
Syrian director Waad Al-Kateab poses during a photocall at the 72nd edition of the Cannes Film Festival in France.
 ??  ?? Rouba Mhaissen awarded the Rafto Prize 2019 for defending human rights from the local to the global level for people living as refugees.
Rouba Mhaissen awarded the Rafto Prize 2019 for defending human rights from the local to the global level for people living as refugees.

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