InformAction
National Film Board of Canada (NFB)
Quebec (Film and Television Tax Credit - Gestion SODEC)
SODEC Soci?t? de d?veloppement des entreprises culturelles ? Qu?bec
Rogers Documentary Fund
Canadian Television Fund created by the Government of Canada and the Canadian Cable Industry - CTF: Licence Fee Program
Canada (The Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit)
Radio-Canada
RDI
How is a dream born? It is born of peace.
How is a dream born? It is born of a full belly.
How is a dream born? It is born of true unity.
How is a dream born? It is born of justice.
All this is in itself a dream.
What else can we dream of?
- Abdul Khafar, photographer
After the collapse of the Taliban regime in 2001, Afghanistan underwent a period of profound disruption. The presidential elections of 2004 followed by the election of a legislature in 2005 are evidence that the country is committed to the democratic process. After twenty-five years of war and privation, Kabul, the capital, is coming back to life and its citizens can dare to hope. Girls are back in school and there is some press freedom. But at street level, progress is still uncertain and reconstruction is a slow process. At a time when the television news is often limited to the latest sensational events, Dominic Morissette’s Afghan Chronicles portrays the rebuilding of a country that dreams of a better future, and presents the vital issues with which this reborn society must contend.
In order to throw light on the struggles of this changing society, the filmmaker focuses on the resurgence of the media in Afghanistansince 2002. The central theme of the film is the press group Killid Media (“key” in Persian), a publishing phenomenon that hopes to be an engine of change. The agency, founded by Afghans returned from exile, produces two weekly magazines (Killid and Mursal, a women’s publication) and runs a radio station. Through its nation-wide distribution network, this small empire can influence the whole of Afghanistan. Its goal is to inform, to educate and to combat the illiteracy of a large percentage of the population by providing popular accessible content in both the country’s official languages, Dari and Pashto. In this struggle against ignorance and obscurantism women play a vital role. In the face of entrenched prejudice, they unhesitatingly put their own lives at risk to challenge social taboos and validate the rights of their sisters. The film chronicles changing attitudes within a deeply patriarchal, even feudal, society.
Afghan Chronicles follows the daily activities of Kamal Nassir, the distribution manager of this new press, as he drives around Kabul visiting the news-stands and sales points. Kamal meets a range of people whose comments give us a glimpse of the impact of this new voice on post-war Afghanistan, still shaken by regional conflicts in which foreign powers are involved. The documentary also introduces us to the successful magazine Killid and to the everyday lives of the women journalists of Mursal. The world of Afghan women and their aspirations is revealed through reports in the field and editorial committee meetings at which each issue’s content is decided. For these women the press is a consciousness-raising tool that enables them to combat old ideas and to help change society. We also meet Farouk Wuruksai, the highly educated host of Radio Killid who wants to revive Afghan culture through his broadcasts, and the old street photographer Abdul Khafar, who talks about the war, corruption and social injustice but also stresses that Afghans themselves are responsible for these internecine conflicts. All these individuals want to believe in peace and the reconstruction of their country, despite the threat of a possible return of the Taliban.
Afghan Chronicles is an in-depth look at Kabul, a city battered and devastated by years of war, a work in progress where powerful ancient traditions persist alongside the arrogance of modern life and its inequalities. Kabul is a city full of life and enthusiasm, a seething mass of humanity struggling to emerge from stagnation. The film takes us along with Kamal Nassir to different neighbourhoods in the Afghan capital, where we witness the frantic confusion of a people trying to come to terms with a new era. Everything has to be rebuilt from scratch and achievements are few and fragile, but many forces are at work in the effort to move out of isolation and into the modern world.
By taking us into the heart of Kabuland showing it in an unusual way, Afghan Chronicles plunges us into the reality of an emerging nation. The tour of the city, filmed in long sequence shots, structures the story and becomes in a sense a metaphor for change, composing a portrait-in-the-round of a shattered cityscape seeking to rebuild itself. It serves as a link between the various characters who reveal themselves to us under the tactful but searching camerawork of Dominic Morissette and Catherine Pappas. Between the noisy background of the on-the-spot street footage, and the more private interviews that bring us closer to the citizens of Kabul, the film becomes the mouthpiece for voices that clamour for greater freedom of action.
In studying a country that is slowly moving towards democracy, Afghan Chronicles shows how fragile that process is. Six months after the first part of the film was shot, things had changed: continuing social inequality and growing insecurity had led to simmering discontent and Kabul was once again living in fear. What will become of the dreams cherished by this land trying to remake itself? The future is unclear, but the people still dare to hope.
Mother, come back home.
Come and read me a story,
A story with a happy ending
With brightly coloured songs.
I have had enough of war.
I am a broken branch!
I want you close to me
To sing of a new world.
I want to be a drop of water
Or a rainbow over my country
To bring out flowers and smiles.
- Marzia Monsif's daughter
A documentary you can’t miss. More, a touching portrait of the building of a country.
Rendez-vous du cin?ma qu?b?cois (RVCQ) Finalist for the Pierre and Yolande Perrault Prize (Best emerging documentary director), Montreal 2007
Yorkton Short Film and Video Festival Finalist for the Golden Sheaf Award for Best Documentary Social /Political 2008
Human Rights Film Festival New Zealand 2008
Yerevan International Film Festival GOLDEN APRICOT - "Directors Across Borders" non-competitive information section 2008
International Week of Justice Festival New Delhi 2008
Tiburon International Film Festival 2009
I first visited Afghanistanin December 2003. Since then, I’ve been back several times to give photo and video training workshops to young students, journalists and social workers. Given the nature of my work, I spent a lot of time with these young people, many of whom have lived much of their lives in exile and who today, squeezed between the weight of tradition and the inequalities of modernity, are dreaming of a new society.
Afghan Chronicles differs from journalists’ reports on Afghanistan. It is not better or fairer, just complementary. It takes viewers into a different reality, to the heart of the disruptions that have shaken this country. It shows events from the inside to reveal the density and complexity of the region’s history.
Afghan Chronicles tells us about something other than obscurantism. We discover another Afghanistan, one of ambitious projects, such as Killid Media, as well as the fragile utopias of the men and women working on those projects. This documentary aims to lift the veil that recent history has thrown over the country, and to tear down a myth, that of the Afghan: “Formerly, a medieval warrior in the heart of the Afghan mountains, then a proud freedom fighter against the Soviet ogre, now an Islamic fanatic with barbarous designs …[1]”
In short, my journey through Kabul aboard the vehicle that distributed the magazines Killid and Mursal gave me an entry into a society that wants to rebuild its country come what may.
[1]Pascal Blanchard, Eric Deroo, « Les images meurent aussi », Africultures, le site et la revue de référence des cultures africaines, October 4, 2002 (Internet Edition).
Dominic Morissette
In Kabul, the press group Killid Media distributes its magazines around the city. We follow, getting an inside view of the reconstruction of Afghanistan and witnessing the emergence of a new society whose future is still uncertain.
Since the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001, Afghanistan has been remaking itself. The presidential elections of 2004 and the new legislature of 2005 are evidence of the democratic process to which the country is committed. Kabul, the capital, is today a hive of activity, and the press has attained some freedom.
Afghan Chronicles focuses on the press group Killid Media, which comprises two magazines (Killid and Mursal, a women’s publication) and a radio station. The documentary reveals how this media phenomenon operates, and in so doing it portrays the rebuilding of a country that dreams of a better future, and presents the vital issues with which this reborn society must contend.
In the midst of this huge reconstruction boom, Afghan Chronicles shows the rifts in a changing society. The magazine Killid, founded to be an engine of change, carries a message of liberation from the bonds of the past and seeks new freedom of action. With its popular and accessible content, this new media venture, in which women play a leading role, combats illiteracy and ignorance. Confronting prejudices and taboos, the documentary chronicles changing attitudes in a country moving towards modernity while remaining deeply attached to the values of its culture.
As it follows the distribution of the weekly Killid throughout the city, Afghan Chronicles reveals the reality of this emerging nation. Dominic Morissette’s tactful but searching camera shifts between sequences shot in the streets of Kabul and more private interviews in which individual Afghans tell us of their hopes and fears. Achievements are still fragile. Growing insecurity and flagrant social inequality hold the threat of a return by the Taliban: what will become of the dreams cherished by this land trying to rebuild itself?
With the participation of Kamal Nassir, Farooq Wurukzai, Marzia Monsif, Hafiza Rahim, Amena Mayar, Nargis Hashimi, Mahbooba Karimi, Jawed, Abdul Khafar, Mastura Maqsudie, Hazmudin, son of Nezamudin, and Ghlum Haidar Hairavi.
Information also available on NFB’s web site:
www.nfb.ca/afghanchronicles