WUNRN
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UNHCR - UN Refugee Agency
Also via Women's Livelihoods -
PWESCR
HONOUR
KILLING - AFGHANISTAN FILM - GRIM REALITY
Ottawa, Canada, September 30 (UNHCR) – Former
refugee Nelofer Pazira's latest feature, "Act of Dishonour," presents
the grim reality of honour killing in Afghanistan, where she grew up before
fleeing with her family in 1989. The award-winning Afghan-Canadian director's
film, which was shot in an abandoned village in Tajikistan, also draws on some
of Pazira's own experiences and it examines the challenges faced by refugee
families returning to the complexity and volatility of modern Afghanistan.
UNHCR provided some help during the making of the film for scenes involving
refugees. Pazira, star of the 2001 film "Kandahar" and co-director of
the 2003 documentary "Return to Kandahar," is on an international
tour to promote the film. She spoke recently to UNHCR Public Information
Assistant Gisèle Nyembwe. Excerpts from the interview:
Tell us about the film and why you made it
"Act of Dishonour" is about honour killing. It is based on the
true-life story of a woman who acted in a short film that one of my friends
made in Kabul. Her husband was in Pakistan at the time of the filming, but he
returned to Kabul as the crew celebrated the completion of filming. He shot his
wife dead because she had left her home and had acted in a film.
Marina Golbahari, who plays the lead in "Act of Dishonour," faces
similar pressures in her own life. She is among a growing number of women in
Afghanistan who remain utterly committed to cinema and who brave threats to
appear in films. During my research and subsequent writing of the script, I
heard from these women, again and again, that they hoped the world see the
reality of their lives through this film.
But the film opens with a young boy shooting an older man. It's a revenge
killing. I have added this because honour killing is an issue that is not just
related to women. Honour and revenge are overriding priorities in this culture.
Yet the film is also about forgiveness. The young bus driver who had avenged
his father's death wants to spare the life of his fiancée –
the woman he believes has betrayed him. There is also a story of a refugee
family returning to their village to find that their home has been taken.
What message did you want to convey to viewers?
Having grown up in Kabul and then emigrated to Canada, I live on the border
of two different cultures – Afghan and Canadian – and I am very much a product of both. To this end, I
wanted to condemn honour killing as well as examine the very idea of honour.
Originally, I wanted to do this in book form, but in 2003 I decided that film
was the best way to tell this story. Images travel faster than the written
word, crossing geographical, tribal and cultural borders.
But it was important to do more than just condemn honour killing and the
suffering of women. I wanted to understand the psychology behind it, to
understand men who are forced by the traditions of their community – and by their own failures – to
murder those they love.
Did you cast any refugees in the film?
Most of the cast members in "Act of Dishonour" are not
professional actors. I liked the challenge of working with them. I was
searching for people whose real-life stories mirrored aspects of my characters.
I wasn't just basing the characters on real-life people, but wanted to find
people who could bring their own stories to the script. One actor, for example,
was a refugee in Iran who returned after 26 years of exile. He found out at
first hand that it wasn't easy to return to his home town in [eastern
Afghanistan's] Wardak province. There are Afghan refugees that live in
Tajikistan, near the Afghan-Tajik border and in other areas. A number of these
refugees came and helped on the film set – either in
front of or behind the cameras.
I played the role of Mejgan, based on my own experience filming in
Afghanistan over the past decade. Trapped between embarrassment and idealism, I
was struggling to show how Afghans could be progressive. During the filming of
Kandahar, we discovered the difficulty of finding women willing to take part in
the film. I was constantly ashamed of the backwardness of my own culture. At
the time, I was trying to persuade Afghan village women to help me prove that
Afghans could be as cultured as anyone else.
Fortunately, we didn't have tragic endings like the fate of Mena in
"Act of Dishonour." But we had terribly sad situations where young
women were prevented from returning to the film set out of fear. Gradually, I
started understanding the culture that once caused me such embarrassment. I
developed more sympathy for women and men in that country. Working with foreign
film crews enabled me to experience their Western naivety about the Muslim
world and the one-dimensional way in which they judged others.
Do you think people will relate to the film?
Stories of honour killings have become commonplace . . . I recall another
incident [of honour killing] in 2001, when I returned to the region to act in
"Kandahar," which was filmed along the Iran-Afghanistan border. We
worked mostly in refugee villages. A teenage girl loved being on the set. We
had filmed a few scenes with her as one of the four wives of a man in the film.
But one day she fled the set for fear of being seen by her father and her two
younger brothers. She was severely beaten by her father for dishonouring his
name. We had to throw away the footage and start again.
Today, in various parts of the world, women are faced with all sorts of
violence – crime of honour is just one. Crime of
honour is not restricted to the Muslim world. A number of honour killings in
recent years have been carried out in the Western world –
sadly mostly among refugee families. They had escaped war, atrocities and yet,
after arriving in a safer environment, the gap between their practices and
those in their new home become obvious. The burden is often placed on women to
safeguard their families' name and honour.
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By Ray Bennett - June 29, 2010
Edinburgh (Hollywood Reporter) - In a remote village in Afghanistan,
a well-meaning Western film crew asks a teenaged bride-to-be to act on-camera,
not realizing the peril she then faces in Nelofer Pazira's quietly effective
drama "Act of Dishonor."
The film combines a sensitive depiction of traditions that horrify
outsiders with photography that conveys the desperate hardscrabble nature of
life there and the astonishing beauty that arises from an unforgiving
landscape. It will attract festival interest, might thrive in art houses and
later prove an instructive piece for television and educators.
India-born Pazira grew up in Kabul and spent time in Pakistan
before immigrating to Canada, where she won an acting prize for
"Kandahar," which centered on her fruitless attempt to find a
childhood friend in Afghanistan.
She writes, directs and stars in "Dishonor," playing
Mejgan, an Afghan woman who grew up in Canada and returns to her homeland with
a film crew hoping to sort out her conflicted emotions. Her friendship with a
beautiful young woman named Mena (Marina Golbahari) prompts the crew's
director, Ben (Greg Bryk), to ask her to be in the film he is making.
Reluctantly, and with the promise of a burqua that she needs for her wedding
night, the girl agrees.
As villagers begin to gossip about the dishonor they consider Mena's
behavior visits not only on her family but also on the village, her father
(Ghafar Quoutbyar) and betrothed (Masood Serwary) begin to contemplate the
ultimate punishment.
Meanwhile, many of those who fled the region when the Taliban took over
have returned only to find that others now occupy their homes and that they are
regarded as foreigners. One of them, an engineer named Ali (Ali Hazara), tries
to act as intermediary between the Canadians and the locals as the filmmakers'
presence causes escalating provocation.
The individual conversations that Mejgan has with Ali and Mena shine
a light on the ferociously held and deeply ignorant principles that keep women
in docile captivity and prevent intelligent men from doing anything to change
things. The tragedy is written in the beautiful eyes of the girl and the dazed
despair of her forlorn father, and the film does them justice, even if they
don't find it elsewhere.