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Voices of Iraq—they must be heard
TownHall.com ^ | 31 Oct. 2004 | Joel Mowbray

Posted on 10/30/2004 10:15:10 PM PDT by txradioguy

Two former MTV producers have accomplished what the entire mainstream media thus far has not: they’ve captured the real life and times of the Iraqi people.

They didn’t do it alone, however. Producers Eric Manes and Martin Kunert sent 150 digital cameras into Iraq this April with very simple instructions: “Videotape your neighborhood, shopping area, where you live and work, pray, relax, and play” and interview “people who have the most meaning in your life.” (See the entire instructions here.)

The cameras were passed on to friends and family members, and the handheld devices eventually made their way to the Shia south and later to the Kurdish north. Thousands of Iraqis turned in over 450 hours of footage, and the results surprised even Manes and Kunert.

The finished product, Voices of Iraq, is a taut 75-minute documentary, opening this weekend in limited release in ten cities. (For listings, click here.) Infused throughout with an Iraqi hip-hop soundtrack, the briskly edited film is hands-off in letting ordinary Iraqis drive the storyline.

Groundbreaking and instantly compelling, VOI is sort of the anti-Michael Moore film. There’s no narration, no heavy-handed editing. And whereas the man from Flint started with his premise and assembled his film to support it, the only goal when making VOI was to emulate the producers’ trailblazing MTV show Fear, which gave cameras to everyday youths who filmed themselves at supposedly haunted locations. Defying expectations, the show was a hit.

Not knowing what to expect, the producers partnered with actor and Gulf War veteran Archie Drury, who personally distributed cameras in Iraq this April. When they started getting back initial footage not long after, the situation was less than ideal, yet nowhere near as bleak as the media portrayed.

Life in Iraq is normal. Maybe not normal by American or European standards, but certainly for a country barely out from under the thumb of a bloodthirsty tyrant.

Throughout VOI, kids are seen being kids: laughing, playing, teasing, roughhousing. Iraqis are seen being silly: an adolescent boy doing what could only be described as a strange solo dance, an actor who filmed himself taking a shower, and policemen making bizarre sound effects and goofy faces. And boys being boys: young men returning to college last month hitting on pretty girls with lame come ons, such as “The most beautiful girl, come here” and “Come here, I just want to talk to you.”

Interspersed with that are painful reminders of Iraq’s all-too-recent savage history, including former victims of Saddam’s torture having a conversation over dinner and video of Shia in the south recovering skeletal remains from mass graves. Though a few longed for the “stability” and “security” of Saddam’s regime, no one seen in VOI was under any delusions about the despot.

During Saddam’s pretrial hearing, Iraqis were shooting in celebration, and one man talked about how he danced when he heard the news of the tyrant’s capture.

Iraqis’ elation at Saddam’s demise should not come as a surprise. The most chilling moments of the film were four brief clips from official Fedayeen (Saddam’s paramilitary) videotape footage: a blindfolded and handcuffed man thrown from the top of a building, falling to his death; a boy’s hand being chopped off; two blindfolded young men, boys really, sitting on a bomb as it detonates; and a beheading.

Lasting no more than 15 seconds and completely silent, those images will haunt even the most jaded for days.

This side of evil, the real enemy of VOI is the mainstream media. Armed with footage that somehow eluded the multimillion-dollar big news operations, the $500,000 film occasionally throws up newspaper headlines—only to show how woefully wrong they were.

From the movie:

* “We can’t work on the street anymore...” quoting the Newsweek bureau chief, 4/13/04, which is placed over images of Iraqis casually strolling down those same streets. * “Fear of Militants Forces Ordinary Iraqis to Stay Home,” San Francisco Chronicle, 5/16/04—over video of Iraqis packed into an outdoor marketplace. * “Iraq may survive, but the dream is dead,” New York Times, 5/7/04, which is seen over footage of wedding celebrants jumping for joy, and followed by shots of exuberant youths rejoicing their college graduation.

Iraqis are nobody’s fools. They are far savvier and more sophisticated than most would realize, particularly the paternalistic, peacenik left, which thought Iraqis were better off under Saddam. VOI has ordinary Iraqis talking about Saddam’s commonly-known harboring of al Qaeda operatives and how foreign governments don’t want Iraq’s democracy to succeed and are thus helping funnel terrorists into the country.

The Iraqi people understand democracy, but more important, they want democracy. Who knows exactly what form or shape their eventual government will take, but if the ordinary folks featured in VOI have any say, it will be a free society. Throughout, Iraqis define freedom as having a secular government, freedom of speech, or the freedom to partake in technological pleasures like the Internet and cell phones.

For those who read the above and want to label the project a partisan hack job without ever seeing it, many in VOI’s team are Democrats. (What else would you expect from Hollywood types?) Anyone still not convinced can go to www.voicesofiraq.com and see most everything left on the cutting room floor.

But there’s plenty in the film to suggest straight-ahead editing, such as several scenes where Iraqis express diametrically opposing views, including about whether or not the country is now better off.

That politics was being openly discussed—on camera, no less—is perhaps the greatest indicator of how much times have changed.

One extended scene showed nuanced political disagreements within one family, spats not that unlike what one would find inside a typical American household. The clan’s pre-teen son, Hasooni, bright and smiling, lacked any confusion or inner conflict, though.

When asked what he “wants to be in the future,” Hasooni exclaims, “American.”


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 2004election; iraq; mediabias; rockthevote; voicesofiraq; wot
Well let's see...the MSM as ignored their own footage of what's REALLY going on in Iraq...they've poo pooed accounts of the soldiers who've been there. Wonder how they'll try to explain away the Iraqi's in their own words showing that life is better there than what the MSM wants us to believe.
1 posted on 10/30/2004 10:15:15 PM PDT by txradioguy
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To: txradioguy
My review
2 posted on 10/30/2004 10:23:58 PM PDT by supercat (If Kerry becomes President, nothing bad will happen for which he won't have an excuse.)
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To: txradioguy

Would have been nice if it had come into view about two weeks ago. sighhhh.


3 posted on 10/30/2004 10:28:54 PM PDT by onyx eyes (............just act normal.....no matter what...)
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To: txradioguy

I have two liberal hippie friends who are still semi reasonable. I'm gonna see if I can get them to see this with me tomorrow. Fortunately there's a theatre in Madison that's showing it.


4 posted on 10/30/2004 10:30:20 PM PDT by Oblongata
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To: Oblongata

I wish every American could see this before the election! Good News from Iraq...Good News for President Bush...BAD VERY BAD news for the media!!! Unfortunately, most people won't see it until after the election...as long as President Bush wins, I guess that's O.K.!


5 posted on 10/30/2004 11:40:19 PM PDT by Woogit (IN GOD I TRUST...NO MATTER WHAT!)
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To: txradioguy

Linda Vester did a program on this Thur or Fri - on Dayside.


6 posted on 10/30/2004 11:42:38 PM PDT by CyberAnt (Election 2004: This election is for the SOUL OF AMERICA)
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To: CyberAnt

Bump...It's showing in 10 cities this weekend...east and west coast...the cities are listed on the web site...hopefully some of them will be in swing areas!


7 posted on 10/30/2004 11:52:57 PM PDT by Woogit (IN GOD I TRUST...NO MATTER WHAT!)
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To: Woogit

I just missed it on PAX. The TV guide just said "paid programming". I checked it when I saw that .. but I was too late .. I had missed it.

That's okay .. I have a copy of the video - which I have watched and cried through and sent to family members.


8 posted on 10/31/2004 1:23:56 AM PDT by CyberAnt (Election 2004: This election is for the SOUL OF AMERICA)
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To: Woogit

Sorry .. it's late .. and I was just talking about Stolen Honor on another thread. LOL!!


9 posted on 10/31/2004 1:25:53 AM PDT by CyberAnt (Election 2004: This election is for the SOUL OF AMERICA)
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To: txradioguy

Here's an entry by an Iraqi citizen who has his own Blog, called "The Mesopotamian."

"Thursday, October 28, 2004
P.S. to the last post:

And folks, just consider all those outside the U.S. What do they want?

I mean the absolute unanimity of choice of every enemy and hater of the U.S.; the Terrorists, the Salafis, the International rivals, the Envious etc. etc.

Then consider your real friends and allies, those who have stood with you and shed blood with you, and are willing to die for the common cause, whom do they want? Do you have any doubt about their preference?

My apology to the half of America who may disagree; and I address them with respect and fondness, but with pain in the heart. Do you really want to give satisfaction to the be-headers, kidnappers and child murderers; and the perpetrators of 9/11? Do you want to hear their savage shouts of victory? This is no reflection on the merit of your man. He may indeed be a paragon of virtue, but that does not change one little bit anything about the situation.

The most important factor in this struggle at the present time after the Will of God is your choice, your steadfastness and your resolve. Give the enemy the slap in the face and the great disappointment he deserves. You are the leaders; and all the lovers of freedom and enlightenment everywhere will take heart and charge with you with redoubled zeal, as they see your courage and defiance at the helm.

Go for it America, your friends are holding their breath and waiting, in anticipation, and yes, with anxiousness, and so are your enemies.




# posted by Alaa : 3:58 PM"

I doubt many of us could have said it as well.


10 posted on 10/31/2004 9:47:48 AM PST by oldfart ("All governments and all civilizations fall... eventually. Our government is not immune.)
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To: txradioguy

Just a feel good bump...I keep expecting to hear the Freepers who live in the cities where this is showing to be talking about it! What's going on?


11 posted on 11/01/2004 1:37:18 PM PST by Woogit (IN GOD I TRUST...NO MATTER WHAT!)
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