Voice of the unknown woman: Afghan filmmaker Roya Sadat
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 21, 2024


Voice of the unknown woman: Afghan filmmaker Roya Sadat
In this photo taken on February 9, 2020, Afghan film producer and director Roya Sadat speaks during an editorial meeting at the Roya Film House in Kabul. The first female filmmaker to make her name after the fall of the Taliban in 2001, Sadat has won plaudits at home and abroad for works such as "A Letter to the President", and "Three Dots", and "Playing the Taar". Mariam ALIMI / AFP.

by Elise Blanchard



KABUL (AFP).- For a generation, Roya Sadat has been a voice for Afghan women in one of the world's worst places to be one.

One of the first female filmmakers to make her name after the fall of the Taliban in 2001, she has won plaudits at home and abroad for works such as "A Letter to the President", and "Three Dots", and "Playing the Taar".

She has lived through the Soviet occupation -- fleeing with her family for their lives at times -- endured the brutality of civil war, and then the violent oppression of Taliban rule, where women existed only in the shadows and basic freedoms were lost.

Her great fear is a return to that kind of fundamentalism: The February 29, US-Taliban deal may be a potential first step for peace in a nation that for decades has only known war, but it offers no guarantees the few women's rights set out in the current constitution will be upheld.

"I feel concerned when I remember how we had simply been forgotten during the five-year Taliban rule until 9/11 happened," says the 37-year-old, adding: "If the international community approaches [Afghanistan] as an open and shut scenario and abandons us again, there will undoubtedly be grave consequences."

Almost 39 percent of girls go to secondary school according to World Bank figures for 2017, while USAid says that of the 300,000 students in universities, around one third are female citing figures from the Afghan Ministry of Higher Education.

These figures are predominantly for urban areas but twenty years ago it would have been all but impossible everywhere.

"There are many good changes happening, coming from the heart of society," Sadat says, but concedes there is a huge amount to be done.

Afghanistan ranks last in the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security index which measures well-being and self-reliance. In rural areas, female literacy can be less than two percent and rights are often even more constrained by conservative tradition.

'Era of suffocation'
She is not alone in fearing that the small inroads made in women's rights may disappear -- in urban centres young people have grown up listening to music, watching television, and more recently accessing the internet and social media. Many have only seen the Taliban on the news.

Sadat, who has been writing stories, poems and plays since she was a little girl, recalls how her life ground to a halt in 1996 as the Taliban rolled in.

Schools closed, women were confined to their homes, the televisions and radios stopped playing. A precocious teenager she continued to write indoors, and read books on directing from her father's collection.

She was allowed to work as a nurse as women could only get female medical help, and even set up clandestine cultural performances of her plays in the hospital, even though the head of it was linked to the Taliban.

"It was very dangerous. I still find it hard to believe that we were able to," she says.

Her first work, "Three Dots", which tells the tale of a single mother who is forced to marry a warlord and become a drug smuggler, was penned during this period, but only made -- using simple equipment -- once the regime changed and she could channel all the knowledge accrued from surreptitious reading, into real world creativity.

This determination and persistence has defined her career, and she feels strongly that film has a social purpose.

The mother-of-two explains: "I turned to cinema, when I had just come out of an era of suffocation, and had a world to express.

"I strongly believe in cinema and that this is the most important art that can influence a positive change in our society. But change cannot come overnight. The change has to come to the thoughts and minds of people."

'Refuse to be silenced'
In her twenties she set up an independent film company -- Roya Film House with her sister Alka, and was awarded a scholarship to study film in South Korea. She has also written television dramas for prominent media firm Moby Group.

Her stories are the stories of Afghan women.

From the outset of her career she has faced questions from her family and criticisms from the community, but she argues that when locals come to see her work -- they understand.

Her 2017 film "A Letter to the President" shows a woman slapping back at her violent husband when he hits her, before accidentally killing him.

Sadat depicted an act of female rebellion in a country where women are often forced to stay in abusive marriages, but recalls how she expected a "bad reaction" because of the taboos surrounding female behaviour. Instead the audience applauded during the slap scene.

Her work is not without risks.

Cinema remains contentious in parts of the country, and her productions, which shine a light on female inequality and repression, controversial.

Hailed by the US for "refusing to be silenced" in the face of threats from conservatives, she was given the International Woman of Courage Award in 2017.

She's committed to supporting the next generation of female filmmakers: the latest edition of her International Women's Film Festival in Herat, which first launched in 2013, received more than 2,500 submissions.

She remains hopeful that she can continue to challenge and speak for Afghans, arguing that film is uniquely placed to change hearts and minds.

She explains: "Cinema can challenge inequality and injustice, it can turn social taboos into discourse, and it can invite people to dialogue.

She adds: "Our people need to criticize themselves, to talk about things that are forbidden. I believe that this society needs a revolution of thought and this cannot be done except with the help of cinema."

© Agence France-Presse










Today's News

March 9, 2020

Sheldon Museum of Art presents Person of Interest

From coughing fits to closings, cultural world girds for coronavirus

Cao Fei and Formafantasma exhibitions now open at Serpentine Galleries

Rome's Raphael show falls victim to coronavirus

The Sydney Opera House goes quiet. Finally.

Exhibition at Staley-Wise Gallery celebrates the work of Louise Dahl-Wolfe and Stephanie Pfriender Stylander

Exhibition presents an exquisite selection of drawings of important buildings in St Petersburg

Voice of the unknown woman: Afghan filmmaker Roya Sadat

Petzel Gallery opens a solo exhibition of new works by Hiroki Tsukuda

David Zwirner

Carpenters Workshop Gallery opens a thematic solo exhibition of works by Joep Van Lieshout

mumok opens an exhibition of works by Steve Reinke

Feminist, fashionable and fighting for sustainability: India's Anita Dongre

Steve Weber, guitarist in oddball folk band, dies at 76

Art Gallery of NSW redresses history with announcement of new facade commission for its iconic entrance

Exhibition of paintings and sculptures by Rudolf Polanszky opens at Gagosian

After inquiry, Domingo withdraws from London performances

When classical composers did the fox trot

Rare fully functional Apple-1 computer among items in Steve Jobs auction

Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego to host art auction 2020 on May 2

Exhibition features contemporary Aboriginal artists, includes more than 100 works

303 Gallery opens an exhibition of works by Gina Fischli

What José Parlá, JR and Kunle Martins learned from graffiti

An astute choreographer stumbles (and rises) to hope

SFER IK Museion in Tulum wins LCD Berlin Award for New Culture Destination of the Year - Latin America

Innovative Upgrades to Make Your Workplace Better and More Efficient




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful