The National - News

Lebanese director keeps the camera rolling to produce a film about hope and perseveran­ce

▶ Wissam Tanios shares with Razmig Bedirian what led him to document his cousins’ journey from the Middle East to Europe

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When Lebanese filmmaker Wissam Tanios heard his cousins, Jamil and Milad Khawam from Syria, were leaving for Europe in 2015, he reached for his camera as a way to cope. Documentin­g their departure was meant to stave off an encroachin­g sense of loss. Little did Tanios know he had begun working on his first feature film.

We Are From There is a documentar­y that is as much about preserving lifelong relationsh­ips as it is about dealing with loss and change. The film, showing at Cinema Akil in Dubai today, took five years to make and stitches together recent footage with old family videos, even those taken by a mobile phone from the brothers’ journey. The end result is a multi-textural experience that goes against the grain of the stereotype­d refugee narrative.

We Are From There had its world premiere at the Internatio­nal Film Festival Rotterdam in January 2020 and won the award for Best Arab Film at the Cairo festival in December.

The story begins as the Khawam brothers are separately preparing to undertake the perilous journey west. Jamil is leaving Lebanon for Sweden, where he hopes to lead a woodworkin­g business.

Milad, on the other hand, has his sights set on Germany. A music teacher in Damascus – a city devastated by war – Milad wants to establish himself as a profession­al trumpeter in Berlin.

The two brothers have dissimilar definition­s of success and they each want to carve out their own path of obtaining it, even if it means fording through dangerous refugee trails. But behind the camera, Tanios is far from happy at his cousins’ resolve.

“It was like a slap in the face when they told me they wanted to leave,” Tanios, 31, tells The National. Jamil and Milad were a vital part of the director’s life. Before the war, he’d travel to Damascus – a mere three-hour drive from his hometown of Beirut – to spend the summer with them. As children, the three boys were inseparabl­e. They kept pet rabbits together and played hide-and-seek in the family carpentry workshop, crouching behind panels of wood as the seeker counted backwards from 10. As they got older, they began to help around the workshop, making classroom benches, dining tables and chairs.

Some of Tanios’s most treasured memories are with his cousins. Their departure brought to mind the stinging loss he felt as a child when his father died and when he lost his sister. Filming was a way of preserving those happy childhood recollecti­ons.

“My survival mode was to take the camera and start filming,” he says. “I understood that at the end of the film, not at the beginning. At first, when you’re filming these ideas are not very clear to you.”

What drove Tanios to keep the camera rolling – recording video chats and traveling to Stockholm and Berlin to shoot – was that he realised his cousins were in a transitory phase of their lives, something he says that was interestin­g to him as a filmmaker. But it took a while for Tanios to realise that it would all lead to a feature-length film.

“When it all started I shot some scenes and I did a small edit and showed it to some friends. As I saw them weeks or months later, they’d ask me what happened to those scenes. So little by little, I realised, ‘Oh, OK, I’m making a film. I have to find a producer. I have to look for funds.’”

Tanios is as much a character in We Are From There as his cousins, even if we only see him in the film through old family videos and a translucen­t reflection caught in the window of a train. He credits his producer Christian Eid and editor Ghina Hachicho with convincing him to have a more active presence.

“I was resisting a lot at first,” he says. “I had made a short documentar­y before about my sister’s death. It went to many festivals, but after watching it years later I felt I was talking too much. But, as much as you resist ... you are talking about yourself through other people.”

When he shot the film, Beirut was politicall­y more stable. “Now everything is different,” he says. “In one of the voiceovers in the film, I say that I can’t leave now because I see what my cousins are losing and I don’t want to go through what they are going through. But now, with everything that’s happening, I understand what they used to tell me. I remember Milad telling me Damascus

I remember Milad telling me that Damascus no longer resembled him and that’s why he had to leave. I understand that feeling now

no longer resembled him and that’s why he had to leave. I understand that feeling now.”

But Tanios was adamant to end the film on a bright note. We Are From There, he says, is meant to upend the narrative of refugees being victims. Instead, he wanted to showcase success.

“I wanted to show that it’s not only about the downs, but also the ups,” he says. “The film is about hope and perseveran­ce.”

Tanios says his cousins have been doing well for themselves since the film’s release. Jamil is due to get his Swedish passport this summer, whereas Milad has released his debut album To The West.

Meanwhile, We Are From There has a busy year ahead, with the film expected to appear in a number of internatio­nal film festivals.

When asked what the “there” in the title refers to, the filmmaker says: “It’s not a physical place. It’s nowhere, definitely nowhere.”

We Are From There will be screened at Cinema Akil today at 8pm

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 ?? Photos Wissam Tanios ?? Khawam brothers Milad, left, and Jamil, middle, with Wissam Tanios. The three boys were inseparabl­e as children
Photos Wissam Tanios Khawam brothers Milad, left, and Jamil, middle, with Wissam Tanios. The three boys were inseparabl­e as children
 ??  ?? ‘We Are From There’ is a multi-textural experience that goes against the grain of the stereotypi­cal refugee narrative
‘We Are From There’ is a multi-textural experience that goes against the grain of the stereotypi­cal refugee narrative

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