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"Sabah" star understands struggles with tradition

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  • "Sabah" star understands struggles with tradition

    The Calgary Herald (Alberta)
    June 24, 2005 Friday
    Final Edition

    Sabah star understands struggles with tradition

    Katherine Monk, CanWest News Service


    Thinking about the "immigrant experience'' is one of Arsinee
    Khanjian's favourite pastimes, especially as it relates to women. As
    a child of Armenian heritage who grew up in Lebanon, and then moved
    to Canada as a young woman, Khanjian has witnessed the struggle
    against cultural assimilation from a variety of perspectives.

    She cares about the issue of identity vis-a-vis traditional values,
    and as a proud Canadian, she stands in awe at the accomplishments of
    our mosaic, hyphen-happy model. That's why she was so interested in
    making Sabah, the first film from Toronto-based writer-director Ruba
    Nadda, which deals with a 40-year-old Muslim woman's belated "coming
    of age."

    Sabah falls for a white Canadian cabinet-maker, leaving her stuck
    between her love of family and her desire for romance.

    "I've always felt close to the issues the script embraces. They are
    issues I grew up with and I'm familiar with, like how do you adjust
    as a woman in society when you're coming from a completely different
    value system? How do you balance the sense of the past with the needs
    of the future? The specifics of the story are different from my life,
    but the overall issues are very much the same," says Khanjian.

    Nadda was a complete unknown when she submitted the script to
    Khanjian through her husband, Atom Egoyan. Egoyan's film production
    company received the script, which requested Khanjian in the lead.

    "I didn't want it to become a commentary on the whole Muslim
    community. I really was looking to Sabah as a way of speaking to
    issues within the family, and not as a means of judging the values of
    an entire community. We spent a lot of time refining these dilemmas
    so it was respectful of the environment," she says.

    Khanjian says she and Nadda decided to focus on moments where Sabah
    suddenly reinterprets her reality. After living with her family for
    40 years, there comes a moment when she looks back on the girl she
    once was -- and the person she imagined becoming. That moment of
    personal recognition sets Sabah on a whole new life tangent.

    She falls in love. She has sex. Yet, as joyful as most of these
    events are, there are consequences to her actions that reach beyond
    her own life, and into the lives of those around her.

    "It's a delicate thing as far as where to draw the lines. Even though
    this is a personal story, there are larger issues that come into
    play. That's OK, I think it's when you're trying to make a large
    statement that's not grounded in an individual story that you run
    into trouble. It's difficult to reflect a larger, collective
    experience . . . and still make a great film."
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