Showing posts with label Articles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Articles. Show all posts

Friday, January 7, 2022

A Critique of the Film Faya Dayi

 Article published at these online magazines around December 25, 2021:

Addis Insight, ZeHabesha, Borkena, Ethiopia 360

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Khat is the main protagonist in Jessica Beshir’s film Faya Dayi that leads and guides the direction of the film. But it is a protagonist which camouflages the truth of these Harari-Oromo youth of southern Ethiopia. And Faya Dayi is now a contender for the Oscars (1), shortlisted in the “Documentary Feature” category.


Beshir hides from us, the viewers, the content and reality of her film behind the stylistic cinematic metaphor of khat’s haze, and takes us for a trip. Her film, which appears at face value to be about the devastations that khat causes these southern Ethiopian communities, is in fact a film with a political agenda that is camouflaged behind khat’s shady smoke, a smoke that hooks the film’s audience into its spell.


As Nick Taylor, an astute reviewer at The Film Experience writes (2): 


...the heavy monochromatic images cloak Ethiopia in a hazy, dreamlike aura that's foundational to the film's tone and point of view.


And asks:


Does the gorgeousness of the imagery actually serve the film, or is it too loaded down to carry its own weight? How much movie truly lies underneath all this black and silver? Well..


Beshir plays with the naivete of the average documentary film audience, who is primarily from a Western county, and who has little information on the socio-political landscape of Ethiopia. 


Adiam Biare, an independent Eritrean businesswoman not affiliated with the film industry, and representing the POWer of Women film festival (POW Film Fest), asks Beshir(3):


I also noticed - and I was just curious about this - that some shots were body parts, like the hand and not the full person. Was there a thought behind that? Or was just...coincidence? Because I thought there was so much power in those...just watching the hand movements and there hearing the person talk and not seeing the whole person…


Beshir answers:


Of course that was thought of...There is a lot of power in the image, in which part, and what is it that you’re showing, and what is speaking to you at the moment. And where is that emotional response landing, at the time that I’m there shooting. So those are the body parts that were speaking to me the most when I was there...And I guess that becomes a little bit of a language of the film. A little bit of the perspective...And I was trying to understand what these different perspectives bring to the whole. If I were to shoot the whole, what is that communicating, as opposed to a part. And how that part can also speak volumes...More that the bigger pictures, per se. It was again, that “caller-response.” 


And Selome Hailu, a writer from the Variety asks the all-important question (4):


“What does Faya Dayi mean?”


Answers Beshir:


“You know, I didn’t find out the meaning until about a year ago.” 


And Beshir continues to elaborate her discovery of the meaning of this phrase, after she had already shot her documentary - 


“The meaning is ‘giving birth to wellness,’ or ‘giving birth to health.’ I had no idea. It’s a hymnal chant that [farmers in Harar] chant when they’re harvesting. It’s a moving chant that has stayed with me. I felt like, ‘Okay, whatever comes out of this film - because I don’t know what it’s going to be - it’s going to be called Faya Dayi. I knew that from the get-go. Because they’re chanting, they’re giving each other morale and energy to continue to work…’


“Hazy aura” and “not seeing the whole person.” A chant with no explanation. What does all this mean? What is the purpose of Faya Dayi, if we cannot clearly view the images, see the whole body - the whole person - or understand the chant? 


Beshir’s aim is to introduce her own perspective, which she solidifies into an agenda. 


The London based filmmaker and Third World activist Ruhi Hamid tweeted (5) an exulting couple of lines on Faya Dayi in October 2021, just as the film was released into the film festival circuit, and in this case at the London Film Festival’s (LFF):


Just seen the most beautiful and powerful film at the #LFF Faya Dayi is an intimate observation of an Ethiopian Muslim community lovingly told by its Ethiopian director Jessica Beshir. Obs doc at its best. #Ethiopia#harrar#observational#Documentary:


I sent an email to Hamid:


Beshir got vague translations of the stories her subjects told her while she was on location in Harar, but didn't find out their exact words until much later. While putting the film together in New York, she would send selected sound bites to someone in Ethiopia who would translate Oromoo [Oromigna] to Amharic so she could translate the English subtitles herself [Source: Chanting at Sundance: Jessica Beshir on Faya Dayi].


[...]


Isn’t one of the tenets of “anthropological” [i.e. Obs doc] filmmaking to know the culture? Beshir spent ten years making this film.  


I spent two years in Mexico to perform rural health research. Within six months I was close to fluent in Spanish. By the end of my two years, people mistook me for a Mexican. 


Hamid never replied. But she never followed up on this “most beautiful and powerful film” in further posts.


Other accolades and praises followed, with but a few cutting through the heavy smoke. The haze of Faya Dayi seems to have successfully covered the issues and agendas, intoxicating the film audience.


It is difficult to keep up with the times, and with the global times. And infinitely more difficult to understand all the nuances, back stories, and other stories to thread together the truth of the information we receive in our Brave New World.


Beshir was interviewed on Faya Dayi by a group that has a podcast platform called Free Oromia. The interview is recorded on episode 41 at their podcast (6). The group posted a tweet (7), which the elusive Beshir carefully managed through links, where she “liked” this post with both her @fayadayi (8) and @jessybeshir (9) twitter accounts, but retweets it only with her @fayadayi account, making it more difficult to pin down injurious associations [see links at the bottom of the tweet].






















We’re so excited to announce our latest episode where we had the chance to discuss @FAYADAYI with the incredible @jessybeshir! #FayaDayi


This group, whose twitter location sign is set up as “Liberated Oromia,” is an Oromo secessionist organization, for the Oromo region to seceed from the Greater Ethiopia. 


The Free Oromia podcast page links to the group’s Facebook (10), which then takes us to its website (11).


The group clarifies its Free Oromia platform in the main page of its website:

Welcome to Free Oromia

Envisioning an independent and sovereign Oromia

And links  to their proclamation on: “Why we must free Oromia” where 


...freedom in the form of independence and sovereignty is a conversation that must be normalized (12)


Their Facebook page is explicit and clear about “Why we must free Oromia”:


Welcome to Free Oromia. We envision an independent and sovereign Oromia in which the people of the nation determine its future.


Another, twitter-active secessionist, Marartuu Marartuu (13), posts on Faya Dayi, with a screen shot from the film.  “All of this because we are #Oromo. Nothing new,” and “...our struggle continues.” This latter is a subtitle from the film (14). Marartuu links to the website olafightsforme.com in her introductory post. 



The OLA  (in the website’s name “olafightsforme.com) is the Oromo Liberation Army (15).


A November 8, 2021 article at Africa Report defines the OLA as (16):


The Oromo Liberation Army (OLA), is an ethnic Oromo armed group fighting the Ethiopian government alongside Tigrayan rebels. They (OLA) are based in Oromia, the largest region in the Ethiopia that encloses Addis Ababa.


It’s leader, Jaal Marroo, whose name the Free Oromiya podcast most likely uses as a pseudonym, says this, from a November 11, 2021 article in Africa Report (17):


Jaal Marroo, the Ethiopian military leader in charge of the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA), has warned Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed that his rebels are inching closer to victory, as the conflict in Ethiopia continues to escalate.

“What I am sure [of] is that it is going to end very soon. We are preparing to push for another launch, and for another attack. The government is just trying to buy time, and they are trying to instigate [a] civil war in this country, so they are calling for the nation to fight,” Marroo said in an interview with AFP on Sunday 7 November.






















Beshir (in the back) with the Oromo Legacy Leadership & Advocacy Association

 

At a time of unprecedented reconciliation, when the Prime Minister of Ethiopia is a half-Oromo with a Muslim father (18), and who was re-elected through a nation-wide, transparent, world-viewed campaign, Jessica Beshir remains bitter and vindictive. 

 

If Beshir is to count her gripes, then she should include a myriad of other ethnic groups, like the Tigray (19) from the north, who speak Tigrigna at home, but communicate in the official language of Amharic in their day-to-day interactions. 

 

One important piece of information which Beshir rarely talks about is her Mexican mother (20). I wonder if this duality, Mexican and Ethiopian, caused her to go full-on with her Oromo “identity,” in order to establish for her self a psychological comfort of belonging “somewhere.” 

 

Her film’s illusive, haze-filled atmosphere is a metaphor for her psyche, where truth and concrete images are camouflaged behind all-encompassing smoke. 

 

On a practical level, something which Beshir never discusses, if she were to be of any help to these Oromo youth, on whose backs she made this film, her obligation is to provide them with educational and drug treatment centers: no more flickers on a cinema screen, but real, on the ground, centers of rehabilitation. 

 

PM Abiy has been doing this for the past couple of years: helping the Oromo (21). 

 

















(Image Source)

 

If Beshir were really up to it, and not in her mental cinematic mood, which apparently isn’t going away any time soon, she would contact these local Oromo centers, and why not, PM Abiy himself, to go ahead with putting her money where her mouth is. 

 

Instead, Beshir lives in her smart Brooklyn apartment, plotting her next film against Ethiopia, and her false, distant, allegiance to the Oromo of Ethiopia.

 

Faya Dayi is shortlisted in the 94th Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for the Documentary Feature category, where the winner will be revealed in the March 2022 Oscars. Oscar nomination (or win) in an obscure category as Documentary Film will hardly raise the profile of Faya Dayi, which has essentially become a “film festival circuit” film, watched by loyal, almost cultish, followers. The audiences that watches it, and gives it the accolades I described above, will hardly put a dent in the financial gains, and general recognition, of the film, nor of Beshir. 

 

Raell Ross, a black American documentary filmmaker best describes his life after his Oscar win, which he admits didn’t advance his profile much (22):

 

“There were people from several major companies that bought all these other films, who would tell me that they liked ‘Hale,’ but they didn’t know what to do with it,” Ross said. “The thing about my film is that it’s not so easily log-lined and it’s impossible to know what it is until you see it, but I still obviously want as many people to see it as possible.”

 

New York-based The Cinema Guild eventually acquired the film, giving it a limited theatrical run last fall. It opened to universal critical acclaim, and the documentary community mobilized around Ross’ achievement, which culminated in its Oscar nomination. But Ross said that outcome has had a negligible effect on him.

 

“It doesn’t really mean anything personally to me, and I don’t think about it unless someone mentions it,” he said. “Since then, I’ve had several inquiries from people about collaborating on film projects, but nothing has really come out of any conversations.” He added that the limited income potential of documentaries, his interests as a filmmaker, and his experimental style were all deterrents from the prospects of landing some major gig.

 

Perhaps Ross invested too much in politics, and less in practicalities. 

 

Beshir’s film will probably receive the same fate. But, its recognition by the Oscars will set the stage for truth telling. When ordinary Ethiopians begin to see the film, or at least hear of its Oscar line-up, then they will begin to ask questions, and demand answers. Is Beshir really schilling for Ethiopia, or is she simply an anomaly, a Mexican-American-Oromo? Fringe film agencies and out-of-view cinema theaters can no longer hide behind their lazy ignorance, nor their blind support of a film with a clear political agenda. And serious artists, who have spent years studying contemporary film, will analyze it without the status quo breathing down their backs. I am such a critic.

 

 

References:

 

1. 94th Oscars Shortlist. https://www.oscars.org/oscars/94th-oscars-shortlists


2. Taylor, Nick. (2021, November 24) Gotham Nominees: Faya Dayi. The Film Experience. http://thefilmexperience.net/blog/2021/11/24/gotham-nominees-faya-dayi.html


3. POW Film Fest. (September 1, 2021) Jessica Beshir Talks About her Film Faya Dayi. http://fb.watch/a3ShJukahe

4. Hailu, Selome. ((2021, February 12) Chanting at Sundance: Jessica Beshir on Faya Dayi Letterboxed. https://letterboxd.com/festiville/story/chanting-at-sundance-jessica-beshir-on-faya/


5. Ruhi Hamid [@RuhiHamid]. (2021, October 10). Just seen the most beautiful and powerful film at the #LFF Faya Dayi is an intimate observation of an Ethiopian Muslim community. Twitter. https://twitter.com/RuhiHamid/status/1447257423052423171


6. Maroo, J., & Aangoo, J. (Hosts). (2021, September 16). Faya Dayi. [Audio Podcast episode]. https://freeoromia.buzzsprout.com/1447450/9207747-ep-41-faya-dayi 


7. Free Oromia Podcast [@TeamFreeOromia]. (2021, September 16). We’re so excited to announce our latest episode where we had the chance to discuss @FAYADAYI with the incredible @jessybeshir! Twitter. https://mobile.twitter.com/TeamFreeOromia/status/1438659239094935555


8. Faya Dayi [@fayadayi] https://mobile.twitter.com/FayaDayi 


9. Jessica Beshir [@jessybeshir] https://twitter.com/jessybeshir 


10. Free Oromia. (n.d.) Home [Facebook page]. Facebook. Retrieved December 23, 2021 from https://www.facebook.com/TeamFreeOromia/ 


11. Free Oromia. https://www.freeoromia.org/ 


12. Free Oromia. Why We Must Free Oromia. https://www.freeoromia.org/why   


13 Marartuu [@misskitila]. (2021, January 30) “All of this because we are #Oromo. Nothing new.” https://twitter.com/misskitila/status/1355633795790155778 


14. Cinematheque Trailers (2021, August 25). Faya Dayi (2021) - Documentary [Trailer]. https://youtu.be/fPBrV9V1ylw 


15. OLA Fights for Me. https://olafightsforme.com/ 


16. Africa Report. (2021, November 8) Redaction - African News. Ethiopia: Oromo Liberation Army (OLA), the Other Group Fighting Federal Forces. https://www.africanews.com/2021/11/08/ethiopia-oromo-liberation-army-ola-the-other-group-fighting-federal-forces//


17. Hanspal, Jaysim. (2021, November 11). Ethiopia: Who is Jaal Maroo, the Military Leader in Charge of the OLA? https://www.theafricareport.com/144673/ethiopia-who-is-jaal-marroo-the-military-leader-in-charge-of-the-ola/ 


18. Military Wiki. Abiy Ahmed. https://military-history.fandom.com/wiki/Abiy_Ahmed 


19. Britannica. Tigrinya Language. https://www.britannica.com/topic/Tigrinya-language 


20. Jardin de Ninos & Primaria. Quines Somos. https://www.serradell.edu.mx/about 


21. Abiy Ahmed Ali [@AbiyAhmedAli]. (2021, March 13). Summer wheat cluster farming in Heben Arsi woreda of Oromia region. https://twitter.com/abiyahmedali/status/1370703479296102402   


22. Obesen, Tambay. (2019, April 4). RaMell Ross’ Oscar Nomination Hasn’t Stopped His Experimental Career Plans. https://www.indiewire.com/2019/04/ramell-ross-hale-county-this-morning-this-evening-interview-1202055006/ 


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Faya Dayi: Critique of Jessica Beshir’s Documentary Film

December 23, 2021

Kidst Paulos Asrat

Writer and Artist

Art and Commentary by Kidist Paulos Asrat

Related Article: Ethiopia's Elections - A Strong and United Ethiopia 


Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Chinese Always Playing Catch-up

My comment in my Council of European Canadians article: Who is Dr. Theresa Tam, following up on the discussion in the comments on China:
It is easy to dismantle their [the Chinese] apparent incursions into the West, since they are always playing catch-up.

Sunday, May 3, 2020

Video on Theresa Tam

The Council of European Canadians have posted a video by Youtube video reporter Jill Colton, which discusses Theresa Tam, and which has my a screen shot of my CEC article. Colton also briefly discusses my article, which now has a record of 179 comments by concerned readers on the CEC website.


Saturday, January 12, 2019

Chinese Aesthetics: Where Harmony and Cohesion
Trumps Individuality and Innovation

I came across this statement I made at Camera Lucida in August, 2008, shortly after the Summer Olympics that were held in Beijing, China that year:
...the Chinese are content to maintain the authoritarian, collective culture that has been part of their tradition for eons.
And I wrote an article on the Beijing Olympics with that quote as the guiding idea.



From an unpublished article on the 2008 Olympics in Chinese: Zhang Yimou: Spokesman for China
Written by KPA September 12, 2008
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Zhang Yimou: Spokesman for China

The Beijing Olympics opening ceremony was directed by the world-famous, Oscar nominated Chinese film director Zhang Yimou. His exquisitely shot films show young brides, concubines, and peasant women consumed by the monolithic forces that these women (and it is often women) find themselves in.

The films’ storylines are often bewildering to Western viewers. Are we to sympathize with the characters, is Yimou agreeing with the forces of authority, is he so fatalistic that he cannot see any other story? We are led to believe that the unique beauties - of the young girls, of the surrounding scenery, or in the case of Ju Dou, the lusciously dyed textiles - will overcome anything. But they don’t, and these young women, once distinctive in their charms and their quests, can never escape their culture’s expectations, and are forced to sacrifice their individuality and singularity to the collective fabric of their communities in sad and tragic ways. Some go insane, others simply get old, and yet others bitterly, or blithely, try to forget.

Throughout China’s history, there seems to have been an overpowering preference for the individual’s submergence into the collective. Confucius lays out the ground rules for this coexistence, and Communism was the harshest, most inhumane, example of that history. Yimou is simply recording this cultural reality. He further demonstrates this with his direction of the Beijing Olympics opening ceremony. The spectacular ceremony consisted of thousands (15,000 in total) of Chinese performers shifting in huge carpets of precise and united movement.

The world of Chinese human coordination is brought to light when Yimou compares Chinese performers to those of North Korea. He says: “Other than North Koreans, there’s not one other country in the world that can achieve such a high quality of performance.” Yimou didn’t compare his 15,000 synchronized human bodies to American or European artistry, but to an enclosed, isolated extreme dictatorial state like North Korea.

While discussing his experience working with Western actors, Yimou says: “[They] were so troublesome [because] in the middle of rehearsals they take two coffee breaks…[T]here can’t be any discomfort, because of human rights…[T]hey have all kinds [of] organizations and labor union structures. We’re not like that. We work hard; we tolerate bitter exertion.”[] Like the suffering his heroines endure, Yimou confesses that he sees nothing wrong with exerting pressure and discipline on his performers to have them conform to his giant designs.

How different is he and the Chinese, then, from the isolated, dictatorial North Koreans, whose mass parades have garnered his respect? In the name of human collectivity, Yimou acknowledges that Chinese performers are, and should be, willing to tolerate abuses on their bodies, give up their basic human rights, and work under extreme conditions. Yimou’s comparison of neo-Communist, modern Chinese performers with North Koreans is depressingly retrograde. Despite glowing references by the world community, China is still stuck in its past.

Still, one cannot deny the importance of culture and history on a country’s artistic formation. Yimou’s artistic style, both in film and in his latest contribution to the opening ceremonies, is part of Chinese art and artistry, where harmony and cohesion trumps individuality and innovation. This is evident in Chinese watercolor paintings where composition - a concerted effort at harmony – supersedes individual artistic expression. As Yimou’s films themselves show, while his characters go through tremendous suffering and even tragedy, often the best he can come up with is an ambiguous acceptance of the status quo. An outright nihilism or rage would be more understandable, instead of deferment to the collective which in many cases can only be achieved if the individual is sacrificed, like Songlian in Raise the Red Lantern, who goes insane rather than live through her atrocious life.

Olympics which took place in Westernized countries - the US, Australia and Greece to name a few - emphasized more individualized performances and content-rich opening ceremonies, rather than the mastery of synchronized masses. The human presence in these Western performances were a means to a narrative, where one idea leads to another in space and time to tell a story or to reach a point. Most of the Western programs had also a limited in number of performers, since their intention was to use them as actors in a story and not as bodies in giant designs.

Yimou’s primary purpose was to use his human subjects as anonymous forms to make stadium-sized patterns. There was no emphasis on time or space, and the performers were enclosed within their own tightly limited areas. The Western performers, on the other hand, both individuals and groups, often moved from one end of a stadium to another for a particular purpose – to reach a destination, to enter into a building, or as in the young boy in the boat from the Athens show, to reach shore.

Yimou’s shore has now come and gone. The Chinese had their chance to show the world what they were made of. Astute observers will notice that nothing much has really changed in modern China, as exemplified by even their most freest commentator, an artist, who confesses admiration for the artistic endeavors of one of the harshest regime in the world, and admits that he emulates its style.

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[1] “Zhang Yimou’s 20,000-Word Interview Reveals Secrets of Opening Ceremony,” Nanfang Zhoumou (Guangzhou), August 14, 2008