Among
the dwindling holdouts in the rebel-held Old City neighborhood of Homs, an area
of the devastated Syrian city that international relief officials are trying to
evacuate, is the former star goalkeeper of the national soccer team,
transformed over three years from a pacifist antigovernment protest leader into
a homegrown guerrilla fighter.
The
former goalkeeper, Abdul Basset Saroot, saw colleagues die from army sniper
bullets and disappear in government detention. He suffered a grievous leg wound
and, his friends say, is now surviving on well water and seven olives a day.
Mr. Saroot, considered a terrorist by President Bashar al-Assad’s government, is the main character in a new film, “Return to Homs,” which made its United States debut last month at the Sundance Film Festival. In a surprise, it won the World Cinema Grand Jury Prize for Documentary, catapulting the film and its creators to a new level of international recognition.
“I
didn’t expect genuine interest in the film,” said Orwa Nyrabia, 36, an accomplished
Syrian cinematographer who co-produced the film and showed it recently at a New
York screening arranged by the Open Society Foundations, a human rights group.
In an interview, Mr. Nyrabia said he and the Syrian director, Talal Derki, had
not even been sure they could enter the film at Sundance because they had no
credit cards to pay the online registration fees.
“What
was good is that the team of Sundance waived the fees,” Mr. Nyrabia said.
Shot
between 2011 and 2013 and distilled from 300 hours of footage into 87 minutes,
“Return to Homs” chronicles the Syrian conflict as seen largely through the
eyes of Mr. Saroot, a 19-year-old goalkeeper and singer who put aside soccer to
lead protests against President Assad in Homs, Mr. Saroot’s hometown and long a
cradle of anti-Assad grievances. The early scenes show Mr. Saroot orchestrating
chants against Mr. Assad at street rallies during the first giddy months of the
conflict, energized by the infectious spirit of Arab Spring revolts in Tunisia,
Egypt and Libya.
Using
an assortment of digital cameras including Handycams, Mr. Derki and Mr. Nyrabia
captured raw scenes of combat, dead children and grieving parents, as well as
Mr. Saroot’s singing, serious injuries and moments of despair. The filmmakers
followed Mr. Saroot and his colleagues, documenting the government’s
increasingly violent response to their resistance, their decision to arm
themselves, the shelling and bombing that razed their homes and their
day-to-day struggle, scrounging for food and clothes abandoned by civilians who
fled what had become a war zone.
Mr.
Nyrabia said the filmmakers had spent much of the time living with Mr. Saroot
and his friends in the rubble of their neighborhood, recharging their phones
and laptops from car batteries and portable gasoline generators. They risked
their lives to sneak in and out past army checkpoints, and taught Mr. Saroot’s
colleagues how to use Handycams when it became too dangerous for the filmmakers
to remain in Homs. The footage was smuggled out.
Orwa Nyrabia, Syrian cinematographer
There
were some lighter moments, Mr. Nyrabia recalled. When a missile hit a street in
the Old City neighborhood, the explosion created a crater and ruptured an
underground drinking water pipe. “So the big hole became a swimming pool, and
all the children started to swim, and it became like their joy in summer,” he
said. “These things do happen.”
In recent days, as the United Nations and the Syrian Arab Red Crescent brokered a deal for remaining noncombatants to leave if they wished, Mr. Nyrabia said he had remained in contact with Mr. Saroot and his colleagues. “They’ve been living on seven olives a day each for the past month, and they’re about to run out of olives,” he said.
But
Mr. Saroot intends to remain in Homs, Mr. Nyrabia said, and Mr. Saroot’s
fighters, who are all from the same neighborhood, know about the film’s
increasing recognition. “They celebrated,” he said, “although nobody knew what
Sundance is.”
The
film, which cost about $300,000 to produce and was financed partly through
European grants, made its original debut in Amsterdam last year. But the Sundance
prize attracted enormous attention and there are now plans to show the film in
40 countries in the next three months, Mr. Nyrabia said.
Journeyman
Pictures, a London-based documentary cinema distribution and production
company, announced on Wednesday in a Twitter posting that it had secured
worldwide rights to the film.
While
Mr. Derki managed to leave Syria without a problem, Mr. Nyrabia was detained at
the Damascus airport on Aug. 23, 2012, and later accused of making a film with
a terrorist. He was held for three weeks by military intelligence in an
underground prison, he said, thrown together with 84 younger Syrians, most of
them conscripts apparently reluctant to shoot fellow Syrians. “They had blinked
before shooting,” he said.
His
fellow inmates were deferential, Mr. Nyrabia said. “They wouldn’t make me queue
for the bathroom because I was considered very old.”
Mr.
Nyrabia, who now lives in Berlin, attributed his release to pressure on the
Syrian government from international publicity about his disappearance. A group
of prominent filmmakers and Hollywood celebrities including Robert De Niro and
Martin Scorsese, along with members of 24 international and American cinema
associations and unions, signed a petition demanding that the Syrian authorities
free Mr. Nyrabia.
While
Syria’s government routinely ignores demands by Western political leaders, Mr.
Nyrabia said, “when it’s De Niro or Scorsese, that’s embarrassing.”
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