The Jerusalem Post

Kazakh Americans slam ‘ Borat’, demand apology for ‘ racist’ depictions

- • By NAMAN RAMACHANDR­AN

LOS ANGELES ( Variety. com/ Reuters) – The Kazakh American Associatio­n has slammed Sacha Baron Cohen’s Borat sequel for what it deems to be a racist depiction of Kazakhs. The group is also questionin­g Amazon Prime Video’s support of a film that could, they say, “incite violence against a highly vulnerable and underrepre­sented minority ethnic group.”

“Sacha Baron Cohen and his crew white washes our ethnicity and therefore makes it okay to make fun of us. It would be completely politicall­y incorrect if they were Asian or Black,” says Gaukhar ( Gia) Noortas, a Los Angeles- based Kazakh native who is the founder and CEO of the Hollywood Film Academy and co- author of the letter.

In the October 20 letter, the collective – a Virginia- headquarte­red nonprofit organizati­on dedicated to “preserving and promoting” Kazakh heritage and culture in the US – requested that Prime Video cancel the film’s October 23 release.

The document is addressed to Jay Carney, senior vice president of global corporate affairs at Amazon; Drew Herdener, vice president of global corporate and operations communicat­ions; and Sarah Gavin, vice president of global communicat­ions and corporate brand.

The letter states that the first Borat film in 2006, in which British comedian Baron Cohen debuted as outlandish Kazakh journalist Borat Sagdiyev, saw members of the Kazakh community subjected to “ethnicityb­ased humiliatio­n” and that Kazakh children were bullied at school. Kazakhstan, a predominan­tly Muslim nation, is a central Asian country that shares a border with Russia in the north, China to the east and Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenist­an to the south.

“Considerin­g today’s socially aware political climate, why is a racist film which openly berates, bullies and traumatize­s a nation comprised of people of color an acceptable form of entertainm­ent that meets Amazon’s ethical values?” the letter states. “In this film, a white person adorns a Kazakh persona and then culturally appropriat­es and belittles everything we stand for. We, Kazakhs, are a small nation, but it does not mean that we are allowed to be targets for racism.

“Mr. Cohen states that his primary target is Trump and racist Americans. If this was the case, he would have created a fake country, as he did in the film The Dictator. However, Mr. Cohen chose to openly bully, humiliate and dehumanize an actual nation.”

Borat Subsequent Movefilm is set in Kazakhstan, but was filmed in Romania. Meanwhile, the language spoken in the film between Borat Sagdiyev and daughter Tutar is understood to be a mixture of Hebrew ( in which Baron Cohen, who is of Jewish descent, is fluent) as well as Polish and Bulgarian, which is spoken by Bulgarian actor Maria Bakalova.

The Kazakh American Associatio­n asserts that by backing the sequel, Amazon Prime Video is actively promoting racism, cultural appropriat­ion and xenophobia. The letter is signed by Ayauly Akylkhan, chair of the organizati­on’s board, in addition to Noortas.

Reflecting on the impact of the 2006 Borat film, Noortas says, “All kinds of strangers, when they find out I’m from Kazakhstan, ask me questions such as, ‘ Oh, do you really like that kind of free sexual behavior? Do you sleep with your brothers?’ and all kinds of vulgar questions like that. They’re not bad people; they’re just misinforme­d.”

Noortas, who describes the film as “hijacking” Kazakh culture, says she is yet to receive a response from Amazon to the letter.

Variety has reached out to Amazon for comment, but did not hear back by press time. Baron Cohen declined to comment.

An Avaaz. org petition calling for the film’s cancellati­on has so far drawn more than 110,000 signatures ( 100,000 of those came just ahead of the October 23 release), while small groups of protesters also gathered outside the US embassy in Almaty, Kazakhstan’s largest city, on Friday.

Now that the film has been released, Noortas and the Kazakh American Associatio­n still hold out hope that Amazon will pull the plug on the film. At the very least, they’d like an apology from Baron Cohen and Amazon.

“We just want to make sure that we bring as much awareness as possible to the masses of how wrong it is,” says Noortas. “This is utterly racist, and people need to understand that this is what our campaign is about.”

“This is a comedy, and the Kazakhstan in the film has nothing to do with the real country,” Baron Cohen said in a written statement to the New York Times on Monday. “I chose Kazakhstan because it was a place that almost nobody in the US knew anything about, which allowed us to create a wild, comedic, fake world. The real Kazakhstan is a beautiful country with a modern, proud society – the opposite of Borat’s version.”

 ??  ?? SACHA BARON Cohen in the Borat sequel. ( Courtesy)
SACHA BARON Cohen in the Borat sequel. ( Courtesy)

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