Zürcher Nachrichten - Sudanese filmmakers shine light on war's 'silent problems'

EUR -
AED 4.339628
AFN 76.80793
ALL 96.601284
AMD 446.973296
ANG 2.115258
AOA 1083.578502
ARS 1709.863127
AUD 1.684002
AWG 2.129934
AZN 2.004303
BAM 1.955818
BBD 2.378752
BDT 144.321307
BGN 1.984437
BHD 0.445555
BIF 3485.831573
BMD 1.181656
BND 1.502514
BOB 8.161108
BRL 6.20003
BSD 1.181026
BTN 106.883425
BWP 15.553207
BYN 3.372631
BYR 23160.451778
BZD 2.375291
CAD 1.614195
CDF 2599.642638
CHF 0.91673
CLF 0.025631
CLP 1012.028901
CNY 8.198567
CNH 8.199302
COP 4287.874049
CRC 585.485484
CUC 1.181656
CUP 31.313876
CVE 110.261333
CZK 24.378619
DJF 210.275425
DKK 7.467225
DOP 74.090985
DZD 153.302928
EGP 55.461268
ERN 17.724836
ETB 182.975832
FJD 2.601711
FKP 0.86251
GBP 0.863282
GEL 3.184588
GGP 0.86251
GHS 12.968172
GIP 0.86251
GMD 86.261042
GNF 10364.655314
GTQ 9.058775
GYD 247.093284
HKD 9.231195
HNL 31.203415
HRK 7.535062
HTG 154.802057
HUF 380.110877
IDR 19834.977216
ILS 3.658365
IMP 0.86251
INR 106.859484
IQD 1547.220561
IRR 49777.246674
ISK 144.811545
JEP 0.86251
JMD 185.201677
JOD 0.837826
JPY 184.886643
KES 152.374794
KGS 103.336031
KHR 4767.063349
KMF 493.932232
KPW 1063.425303
KRW 1721.400502
KWD 0.363017
KYD 0.984213
KZT 586.713528
LAK 25404.337597
LBP 105763.305484
LKR 365.530937
LRD 219.67199
LSL 18.874832
LTL 3.489122
LVL 0.714772
LYD 7.463752
MAD 10.827132
MDL 19.983266
MGA 5232.069529
MKD 61.679405
MMK 2481.401498
MNT 4218.32969
MOP 9.504226
MRU 46.896837
MUR 54.214692
MVR 18.256503
MWK 2047.563324
MXN 20.392949
MYR 4.646264
MZN 75.330365
NAD 18.875551
NGN 1616.155302
NIO 43.460761
NOK 11.422942
NPR 171.044273
NZD 1.962701
OMR 0.45438
PAB 1.181016
PEN 3.970236
PGK 5.059875
PHP 69.685768
PKR 330.32801
PLN 4.216803
PYG 7816.806196
QAR 4.307693
RON 5.094469
RSD 117.419987
RUB 89.95126
RWF 1723.722906
SAR 4.43139
SBD 9.521902
SCR 16.205764
SDG 710.745918
SEK 10.596161
SGD 1.502836
SHP 0.886548
SLE 28.92105
SLL 24778.728397
SOS 673.808954
SRD 44.777663
STD 24457.887298
STN 24.500533
SVC 10.333656
SYP 13068.609747
SZL 18.874251
THB 37.435444
TJS 11.036947
TMT 4.147612
TND 3.415815
TOP 2.845143
TRY 51.414785
TTD 8.000276
TWD 37.330894
TZS 3049.013957
UAH 50.948755
UGX 4205.038088
USD 1.181656
UYU 45.518486
UZS 14477.641053
VES 439.151193
VND 30701.778474
VUV 141.274961
WST 3.221394
XAF 655.965717
XAG 0.013102
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.193483
XCG 2.128528
XDR 0.814728
XOF 655.979596
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.677234
ZAR 18.897771
ZMK 10636.324377
ZMW 23.119307
ZWL 380.492654
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    16.8

    -1.19%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.53

    -0.55%

  • BCC

    4.3900

    89.32

    +4.91%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    -0.5600

    95.81

    -0.58%

  • GSK

    3.5500

    56.89

    +6.24%

  • BCE

    0.3100

    26.41

    +1.17%

  • NGG

    1.4950

    87.725

    +1.7%

  • JRI

    0.0280

    13.148

    +0.21%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    23.83

    -0.46%

  • BTI

    -0.0850

    61.785

    -0.14%

  • RELX

    -0.4100

    30.1

    -1.36%

  • VOD

    0.3700

    15.62

    +2.37%

  • AZN

    2.6750

    186.995

    +1.43%

  • BP

    0.3200

    39.14

    +0.82%

Sudanese filmmakers shine light on war's 'silent problems'
Sudanese filmmakers shine light on war's 'silent problems' / Photo: Khaled DESOUKI - AFP

Sudanese filmmakers shine light on war's 'silent problems'

Sudanese directors and actors were in Egypt this week hoping to use the power of cinema to shine a light on the war devastating their country and on world indifference.

Text size:

Fighting broke out in mid-April last year between Sudan's regular army, headed by the country's de facto leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) led by his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.

The war has killed tens of thousands of people and forced millions more to flee their homes, triggering acute food shortages and a dire humanitarian crisis in the already impoverished country.

This desperation was highlighted at the Aswan International Women Film Festival through five Sudanese short films.

"We must speak about ourselves and our silent problems, even through a simple artistic production," Sudanese actress and human rights activist Eiman Yousif told AFP.

"Now there is a certain degree of freedom that was not present before," she said of the pro-democracy protests that overthrew autocratic president Omar al-Bashir.

During the 30-year iron-fisted rule of the Islamist strongman, which ended in 2019, the industry in Sudan suffered, with numerous cinemas forced to close.

Bashir's ouster ushered in a civilian-led transition that saw an outpouring of hope among the Sudanese people, but it all came to an end amid the violent power struggle between the rival generals.

- 'The result of suffering' -

Sudanese filmmakers and actors say they are determined to restore that hope.

"We are doing everything possible to ensure that film production does not stop again," said Sudanese director Mohammed al-Tarifi on the sidelines of the Aswan festival.

The film industry in Sudan "is the result of suffering first and foremost", he said, referring to decades of conflict in the northeastern African country.

Among the short films shown at Aswan was director Razan Mohammed's "A Brick for Them", which recounts the fate of women displaced to a refugee camp in 2003 during the war in Sudan's Darfur region.

"As we speak, they have been displaced a second time to an unknown location, but life goes on," Tarifi said.

Another movie, "Women of War" from director Algaddal Hassan, reflected on the impact of conflict on the women of the Blue Nile state in southern Sudan, also shattered by the war.

The conflict between the army and the RSF, now in its second year, has killed tens of thousands and displaced 6.7 million people internally. An estimated 1.8 million have fled the country, among them 500,000 to neighbouring Egypt.

"The diaspora generates creativity... the Sudanese presence in Cairo is accompanied by a very active artistic movement which will allow more productions to see the light of day," said Tarifi, who now lives in the Egyptian capital.

"Wars and crises are exhausting", but they are also sources of "dreams and new ideas", said Yousif, who played the main role in "Goodbye Julia" -- the first ever feature-length Sudanese movie presented in the Cannes Film Festival official selection in 2023.

In a Sudan hungry for change, a new cinema style has emerged, fed by the energy of the revolution that ousted Bashir.

After the dictator's overthrow in 2019, director Amjad Abu Alala's film "You Will Die at 20" became the first Sudanese movie selected for the Oscars and at the Venice Film Festival, where it received the Lions of the Future award for best first feature film.

And even if cinemas are now rare in Sudan, Yousif believes that "all you need is a projector and a white wall to show people films".

"The most important thing is to watch."

G.Kuhn--NZN