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  • Chechnya and war through the camera

    International Herald Tribune

    Chechnya and war through the camera

    Joan Dupont IHT Tuesday, April 6, 2004

    PARIS-There is a generation of filmmakers who risk their lives to expose the
    terror and humiliation of war. They work independent of television and cable
    news channels and are not in the business of being embedded.

    Gilles de Maistre, a leading French reporter, for instance, is known for
    "J'ai 12 ans et je fais la guerre" (I'm 12 years old, and I make war), an
    investigation of preteen warriors that won an international Emmy.

    And Mylène Sauloy is one of a handful of women to enter Chechnya
    clandestinely, draped in a headscarf. "Then, I put my camera in a plastic
    bag, and pile bananas on top - I could be a housewife coming back from
    market," she said.

    Raised in Marrakech by a Moroccan doctor father and Russian-Hungarian
    mother, the director lived in Colombia for 17 years, making films. She also
    worked with de Maistre, interviewing street kids in Bogotá for a
    documentary.

    "One day, I read an article in Le Monde about this small rebel people in
    Caucasia who resist colonization. It wasn't a European story like Bosnia,
    about ethnic racism - it was about a fight for freedom." When the first war
    broke out in 1994, she negotiated with the cultural television channel Arte
    to make a film in Chechnya. "I went right from Bogotá to Grozny," she says.

    Sauloy has filmed broken families, shattered homes and a children's dance
    troupe that made it out of the country to perform in Paris but couldn't wait
    to return home to Grozny.

    Her first film, "Le Loup et l'Amazone" (The Wolf and the Amazon), made from
    1995 to 2000, was inspired by independent-minded women in the mountains of
    Caucasia, who, legend has it, may be descended from the Amazons. "It's a
    poetic idea," she says. The Amazon theme crops up again in her current
    project, which focuses on an army of women hiding in the mountains of Iraq.

    In her headscarf and long skirts, Sauloy has crossed borders into Chechnya
    14 times, turning out films such as "Le 51," about an apartment house in
    Grozny inhabited Chechens, Armenians and Jews. "Grozny used to be a modern
    city, like Algiers, cosmopolitan, with an intelligentsia."

    Two wars - from 1994 to 1996 and from 1999 to today - and a reign of terror
    have reduced Grozny to rubble. The prewar population was less than a
    million; 250,000 have been killed, 200,000 live in exile.

    Sauloy's latest film, "Danse Avec les Ruines" (Dance With the Ruins), tells
    the story of a Chechen choreographer and his family who return from exile in
    Turkey. "I hopped a bus with them in Istanbul, without realizing they were
    really going back home. I was there when they walked into their bombed-out
    house."

    She followed the troupe of 30 children - originally 60 - to Grozny and shot
    the family repairing their home, fitting windows, returning to rehearsal and
    to school. The children sewed their costumes and dreamed of the tour to
    France, "a country where we won't be greeted as terrorists," in the words of
    a teenage daughter.

    Recently, Sauloy, 45, split her weekend between a screening of "Danse Avec
    les Ruines" at the International Women's Film Festival in Créteil, a Paris
    suburb, and her own festival of films on Chechnya at the Cinéma des
    Cinéastes in Paris. "Tchétchénie Criblée d'Images" (Chechnya, Riddled with
    Images), as the festival was called, screened films of rare beauty, such as
    "Eliso" (1928), a silent film by the Georgian director Nikoloz Shengelaya
    about the first deportation of the Chechen people in 1864, under the czars.
    And there were recent films like Andrei Konchalovsky's "House of Fools"
    (2002) and Sergei Bodrov's "Prisoner of the Mountain" (1996), which show
    sympathy for the predicament of the Chechen people.

    In the public imagination, Chechnya has never been a popular cause but a
    thorn in the side of the Russian government, and an embarrassment to Europe.
    Perceived as poor refugees at best, bandits, terrorists and radical
    Islamists at worst, this mountain people of Caucasia live with a terror that
    takes a daily toll on both Russians and Chechens.

    Five years ago, Sauloy founded an arts association, Marcho Doryila ("Let
    freedom be with you"), and recruited figures like the stage and film
    director Ariane Mnouchkine and the philosopher André Glucksman to support
    Chechen artists. Mnouchkine opened her Théâtre du Soleil in Vincennes, a
    suburb of Paris, to the dance troupe from Grozny; at the film festival,
    Glucksman led a debate after the screenings, calling Chechnya Europe's
    guilty conscience.

    Sauloy started filming three years after the collapse of the Soviet Union,
    when some interpreters, journalists and humanitarian workers also worked as
    informers. Her first interpreter in Chechnya was "crazy and dangerous," she
    said, "a regular Russian Mata Hari," which decided her to learn Russian. "I
    was raised with several languages. My grandfather spoke Hungarian, and my
    grandparents spoke Yiddish together. At first, I wrote out questions in
    Russian, but I couldn't understand a word of their answers until I went home
    and translated."

    For Sauloy, the problem is not a Chechen problem, but a Russian one. "It's
    about dehumanization, and it's about our silent complicity. The Chechens are
    the last resistants in the Caucasian mountains, and as a filmmaker, I'm
    interested in resistance, in showing what is left of humanity in wartime."

    She sees the Chechens as an endangered species living in a codified society.
    Hospitality is sacred. "When I enter a Chechen home, my host sits next to
    the door and seats me furthest away from the door so, if we are attacked, he
    will be killed, not I."

    Sauloy balks at the way Chechens have been demonized, yet admits that the
    situation has changed since the October elections, which installed a
    pro-Russian Chechen government. "Before, when you crossed a Russian
    checkpoint, you knew where you were. Now, there's a Chechen militia, paid to
    do the dirty work. Life is becoming more dangerous, the way it was in France
    under the Occupation."

    After the first war, Saudi Arabia recruited 2,000 Chechen students, who
    became hardline Islamists. "Things have changed," she says, "since the first
    woman Chechen suicide bomber blew herself up in front of Russian military
    quarters, and the whole number was filmed on video." Sauloy has talked to
    the orphaned families of these kamikazes, "women who aren't real Islamists,
    but university educated, and who have adopted the look, the headscarf, the
    business of reciting the Koran."

    The Chechens traditionally practice Sufism, a mystic form of religion,
    "something like the whirling dervishes. But now I know dancers and actors
    who never prayed before, who pray. There's a saying, the more bombs fall,
    the more beards grow."

    Now, Sauloy is making a film from a Russian soldier's home video. "You see
    his friends shoot and kill and hear him comment on what he does and sees.
    That video has been sold all over. Watching people kill has become a
    business."

    Her work, she insists, is more dangerous for those who help her than for
    herself. "It's not that I'm fearless, but these people, and these children,
    teach me courage."

    Is her family frightened for her?

    "Oh yes, they are afraid, and they are proud of me," she said.

    International Herald Tribune
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