The Guardian (USA)

‘All he wanted was to serve France’: brother makes film about elite recruit’s initiation death

- Kim Willsher in Paris

A new film has thrown a spotlight on France’s elite military school, Saint-Cyr, more than a decade after a “testostero­ne fuelled” hazing ritual ended with the death of a brilliant army officer recruit.

Pour la Francereco­unts the tragedy of Jallal Hami, 24, who drowned after officers ordered him and other new recruits to swim an icy lake in heavy gear during a midnight “exercise”.

The recruits entered the water to the sound of Wagner’s Ride of the Valkyries – a nod to Francis Ford Coppola’s film Apocalypse Now – playing from a speaker. Several had to be dragged out of the water, but the organisers insisted a second group, including Hami, attempt the 50-metre crossing.

The film, selected for last September’s Venice film festival and released to positive reviews on Wednesday, was made by the dead man’s brother, the film director Rachid Hami, who said it was not a settling of scores.

“Everybody covered the story of my brother’s death as a news event, but nobody told the real story of the young man who was my brother,” Rachid said. “This is a cinematic project inspired by Jallal’s story, it’s not a documentar­y, which would have been a cliche.”

He added: “I had great difficult going back over what happened and had to let time pass to clear my head because you cannot make a film in anger and I wanted this to be a great film, not one about rage or fury.”

Jallal, born in Algeria, was four when his mother, Hadjira, brought him and Rachid, then aged seven, to France in 1992 to escape the north African country’s civil war.

The family settled in the Paris suburb Seine-Saint-Denis, where Jallal

excelled at school and went on to Sorbonne University, spending a year in Taiwan learning Mandarin. After graduating, he joined the Saint-Cyr military school in Brittany, founded in 1802 by Napoleon Bonaparte, which is the equivalent of the UK’s Royal Military Academy Sandhurst.

Hami was described as an “excellent” recruit and put on a fast track for a high-ranking army career. The risk of dying on a battlefiel­d – Mort pour la France – was one he accepted, he told his family.

Hazing and similar initiation rites are banned in France, but on the night of 29 October 2012, Hami and other recruits were woken, ordered to dress and don helmets and were taken out to cross a lake where the water was 9C. It was an exercise in the “transmissi­on of traditions”, they were told. When a first group got into difficulty they were thrown lifebelts but as a second group, including Hami, were halfway across, the spotlight illuminati­ng the lake inexplicab­ly went out and he disappeare­d. His body was found by firefighte­rs several hours later.

Seven serving and former Saint-Cyr officers – including a general – went on trial for manslaught­er in 2020. The state prosecutor said the hazing ritual, fuelled by “uncontroll­ed testostero­ne”, had descended into “madness”. Four officers were acquitted and three others given suspended sentences of between six and eight months.

The Hami family was doubly enraged to learn the conviction­s would not be registered on the men’s criminal records. “You have betrayed my brother again,” Rachid Hami said afterwards. “All he wanted was to serve France, the country that had welcomed him.”

French critics have praised Pour la France, selected for last September’s Venice film festival, as a thoughtful and moving treatment of a personal tragedy and what happens when ordinary people confront a closed, conservati­ve and traditiona­l institutio­n such as the French military, nicknamed lagrandemu­ette (the great mute) for its silent closing of ranks.

Hami’s family felt he deserved the honour of an official funeral. The army at first refused, arguing he had not fallen in combat, but then relented and gave him a military send off. The young officer’s tricolor-draped coffin was then taken to Père-Lachaise cemetery, in Paris.

“Pour la France reenacts this confrontat­ion, without going overboard, but by describing a complex field of forces and tensions, linked to the history of immigratio­n, as well as to the wounds linked to identity,” wrote Le Monde.

Rachid said he is still angry with the individual­s he holds responsibl­e for his brother’s death, but not the military as a whole.

“I wanted to avoid the cliche of the immigrant, north African, Muslim family from the banlieue battling the army. There are already dozens of films like that,” he said. “Instead, this is the story of a young man and his adventures in life. It’s a family odyssey; a contempora­ry version of the Greek tragedy of Antigone.”

 ?? Photograph: Gophoto/Mizar Films ?? Karim Leklou and Shaïn Boumedine in Pour la France, which was praised as a moving treatment of a personal tragedy.
Photograph: Gophoto/Mizar Films Karim Leklou and Shaïn Boumedine in Pour la France, which was praised as a moving treatment of a personal tragedy.
 ?? ?? The film was selected for last September’s Venice film festival. Photograph: Gophoto/ Mizar Films
The film was selected for last September’s Venice film festival. Photograph: Gophoto/ Mizar Films

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