In a schoolyard of rural northeastern Syria, boys and girls break out into giggles watching Charlie Chaplin’s pranks, a rare treat thanks to a mobile cinema roving through the countryside.
In Kurdish-held areas of the northeast, filmmaker Shero Hinde is screening films in remote villages using just a laptop, projector and a canvas screen.
“We’ve already shown films in towns, but we wanted children in the villages to enjoy them too,” the bespectacled 39-year-old with thick graying curly hair said.
Photo: AFP
With some films dubbed into Kurdish and others subtitled, he and a team of volunteers want to spread their love of cinema across Rojava, the Kurdish name of the semi-autonomous area.
“Our goal is that in a year’s time, there won’t be a kid in Rojava who hasn’t been to the cinema,” the Kurdish filmmaker said.
Sitting on colored plastic chairs in the village of Sanjaq Saadun just before dusk, the boys and girls watch wide-eyed as the first black-and-white images of The Kid appear on screen.
Lively piano music rings out across the school basketball court, as Chaplin plays a tramp who rescues an orphaned baby in the 1921 silent movie.
Laughter rises above the darkened playground as he tries to clean the baby’s nose or to feed him from a kettle strung from the ceiling.
Across the Kurdish-held region, old cinemas once showed American B movies, Bollywood fare and porn, but they have lost their audiences and closed.
In local minds, cinema is also tied to tragedy, after a fire ripped through a theater in the nearby town of Amuda in 1960, killing more than 280 children.
Hinde said the mobile cinema aims to introduce children to the magic of the silver screen from the early days of moving pictures — something he missed out on as a schoolboy.
“When we were kids, the cinema was that dark place,” he said.
In primary school, he and others were taken to see films inappropriate for their age and in substandard conditions, he said.
It was only later that he discovered “the truth and beauty of cinema.”
To give today’s children a different experience, “we’re now trying to substitute that darkness for something beautiful and colorful,” he said.
The mobile cinema’s objective is also to screen “films linked to protecting the environment and personal freedoms,” Hinde said.
On another evening in the village of Shaghir Bazar, children rushed in before the film started to grab front-row seats.
On show that day was Spirit, a US animated adventure film about a wild stallion captured by humans who dreams of breaking free and returning to his herd.
Among the audience, Amal Ibrahim said her son Kaddar, seven, and daughter Ayleen, six, were brimming with excitement.
“They could hardly wait to come. They’ve never been to the cinema before,” she said.
Even some of the village’s older men had turned up to see the cartoon adventure, after not having been to the cinema in decades. Standing to one side, they reminisced about the films of their youth.
Adnan Jawli, 56, came along with his two children.
“Today, I brought my kids to the cinema and all my memories are flooding back,” he said.
“Forty years ago, I would go to the cinema and watch the film from outside through the window,” Jawli said. “It was such a great feeling when the lights dimmed and the film started.”
Hinde’s own credits include Stories of Destroyed Cities, a feature-length film about three towns in Syria and Iraq on the road to recovery after Kurdish forces expelled the Islamic State group.
Apart from spearheading the defeat of the jihadists, Syria’s Kurds have largely stayed out of the country’s eight-year war, instead working towards autonomy after decades of marginalization.
Though Kurdish-led fighters are still battling sleeper cells, Hinde and his team are already looking to the future. Beyond their roving cinema, they dream of opening a movie theater at a fixed location.
“But that will depend on the war ending and stability returning to the country,” he said.
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