Egypt targets top 50 global business readiness ranking with key reforms    Egypt's nuclear watchdog says no radiological threat amid regional events    Gold prices slips slightly ahead of Fed decision    Egypt's gold prices fall for 3rd day on Wednesday    Egypt sets 3-month goal to join world's top 50 in business readiness: minister    Egypt's PM urges halt to Israeli military operations    Egypt's FM holds talks with Arab counterparts over Iran-Israel escalation    UN Palestine peace conference suspended amid regional escalation    Egypt advances integrated waste management city in 10th of Ramadan with World Bank support    Serbian PM calls trade deal a 'new page' in Egypt ties    Reforms make Egypt 'land of opportunity,' business leader tells Serbia    Egypt, Japan's JICA plan school expansion – Cabinet    Egypt's EDA, AstraZeneca discuss local manufacturing    Israel intensifies strikes on Tehran as Iran vows retaliation, global leaders call for de-escalation    Egypt issues nearly 20 million digital treatment approvals as health insurance digitalisation accelerates    LTRA, Rehla Rides forge public–private partnership for smart transport    Sisi launches new support initiative for families of war, terrorism victims    Egypt nuclear authority: No radiation rise amid regional unrest    Grand Egyptian Museum opening delayed to Q4    Egypt delays Grand Museum opening to Q4 amid regional tensions    Egypt expands e-ticketing to 110 heritage sites, adds self-service kiosks at Saqqara    Egypt's EDA joins high-level Africa-Europe medicines regulatory talks    Egypt's Irrigation Minister urges scientific cooperation to tackle water scarcity    Egypt, Serbia explore cultural cooperation in heritage, tourism    Egypt discovers three New Kingdom tombs in Luxor's Dra' Abu El-Naga    Egypt launches "Memory of the City" app to document urban history    Palm Hills Squash Open debuts with 48 international stars, $250,000 prize pool    Egypt's Democratic Generation Party Evaluates 84 Candidates Ahead of Parliamentary Vote    On Sport to broadcast Pan Arab Golf Championship for Juniors and Ladies in Egypt    Golf Festival in Cairo to mark Arab Golf Federation's 50th anniversary    Germany among EU's priciest labour markets – official data    Cabinet approves establishment of national medical tourism council to boost healthcare sector    Egypt's PM follows up on Julius Nyerere dam project in Tanzania    Egypt's FM inspects Julius Nyerere Dam project in Tanzania    Paris Olympic gold '24 medals hit record value    A minute of silence for Egyptian sports    Russia says it's in sync with US, China, Pakistan on Taliban    It's a bit frustrating to draw at home: Real Madrid keeper after Villarreal game    Shoukry reviews with Guterres Egypt's efforts to achieve SDGs, promote human rights    Sudan says countries must cooperate on vaccines    Johnson & Johnson: Second shot boosts antibodies and protection against COVID-19    Egypt to tax bloggers, YouTubers    Egypt's FM asserts importance of stability in Libya, holding elections as scheduled    We mustn't lose touch: Muller after Bayern win in Bundesliga    Egypt records 36 new deaths from Covid-19, highest since mid June    Egypt sells $3 bln US-dollar dominated eurobonds    Gamal Hanafy's ceramic exhibition at Gezira Arts Centre is a must go    Italian Institute Director Davide Scalmani presents activities of the Cairo Institute for ITALIANA.IT platform    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.



The Shebab of Yarmouk: Trapped and disenchanted
As part of Zawya's Hybrid Reels programme on Revisiting Documentary, the award-winning movie The Shebab of Yarmouk will be screened on 21 May
Published in Ahram Online on 18 - 05 - 2015

The Shebab of Yarmouk is the first documentary by young French filmmaker Axel Salvatori-Sniz. The footage of the film was shot in the Camp of Yarmouk on the outskirts of Damascus from October 2009 to December 2011.
Being screened as part of Hybrid Reels programme on Revisiting Documentary, the film gives a direct look into the realities of the refugee camp in Syria, and how it formulates the minds of its third generation of inhabitants, shapes their identities and perspectives on life.
Yarmouk Camp was set up in 1957 to house Palestinian refugees from the 1948 war as Israel continues to refuse the Palestinians' right to return to their land and property. While Syria has 12 refugee camps holding around 560,000 registered Palestinians, the camp of Yarmouk is considered the biggest as it accommodated around 60,000 before 2011.
Violent conflicts left the camp in ruins and estimates are that the number of refugees dropped to between 18,000 and 6,000. According to UNRWA and Amnesty International, the camp currently suffers from a lack of medical facilities, electricity and water supplies and all sorts of aid.
The Shebab of Yarmouk is situated in the context directly before conditions in the camp drastically turned violent between different Islamist militia groups and the regime forces. The film opens with the powerful song 'Here is Yarmouk' sung by the Palestinian British singer Reem Kilani, and written by the Palestinian poet and son of Yarmouk, Iyad Hayatleh. From this moment, the viewer enters the realities of the camp and its youth, the shebab.
The film relates the story of five young men and women, Hassan, Alaa, Samer, Tanseem and Waed. They were born and raised in the Camp of Yarmouk, where they are stuck between their identity as third generation Palestinians, “who love a country they did not know and never saw,” as one of the film characters puts it, and their situation as refugees, who are denied citizenship.
Though every one of them has an individual story, they all feel trapped and disenchanted with their reality as they develop ambiguous feelings towards their camp, with their emotions shifting between love and hate, belonging and lack of it, or both sides of the spectrum.
“It is a camp that everyone pretends is a town. It is an ugly reality that everyone tries to beautify," one character explains.
The confusion is also apparent in the characters' identity crisis reconfirmed with a poignant question: “Are we always going to be a camp's children not a country's children?”
The characters' internal dilemmas are only emphasised by the fact that the camp is also a trap that everyone tries to get out of. Filled with blocks of concrete, decaying buildings, garbage everywhere, the camp becomes like a big prison, where the only space might be found is on the roof, “closer to the sky.” Yet all they know is that “Palestine is the camp and the camp is a piece of Palestine.”
In an eye opening statement, a sixty year old man relates that now Palestine is lost in the camp while in the seventies “you would smell Palestine, smell revolution, you would feel you are a Palestinian. Now it is all lost. Nothing reminds you of Palestine any more.”
In their search to find their place in the world, travelling to Europe becomes an overpowering desire, in the hope of establishing a new life, a meaning, maybe starting a family where their children never have to live like their parents. This dream seems impossible when getting a visa becomes an endless struggle that they try to manipulate. Travelling birds, a repetitive motive, contrary to humans can travel across borders with no check points, no visas or passports. Those scenes increase the sense of suffocation, helplessness and sense of imprisonment.
The Shebab of Yarmouk is about a generation lost between their longing for a “lost country” that they realise they will never see and between their situation as refugees, always to be, even if you are lucky enough to leave for Europe. This sense of lost identities is physically accelerated in a camp that is also trapped between militias and the army with no visible way out.
##
The Shebab of Yarmouk was selected at more than 70 international festivals and has won several awards: Regard Neuf for Best First Film at Visions du réel 2013 and the RTP Award for Best Researche Film at Doclisboa 2013.
Born in 1982 in Lyon, France, Salvatori-Sniz studied Arab-Muslim societies as well as filmmaking, and directed several commissioned films for the French Embassy while in Salvador.
Programme:
Thursday 21 May, 7.30pm
Zawya, Odeon Cinema, 4 Abdel-Hamid Said Street, off Talaat Harb Street, Downtown, Cairo
http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/130582.aspx


Clic here to read the story from its source.