AMIR:
AN AFGHAN REFUGEE MUSICIAN'S LIFE IN PESHAWAR, PAKISTAN
John
Baily's film `Amir' conveys an unusual sensibility ... The film
would certainly make a good point of departure in seminars on ethnographic/ethnomusicological
films, as well as being a fine contribution to two neglected fields
of study: the music of Afghanistan and the musician as exile. Let
us hope that one day the film will stand as historic footage of
a brief moment in the history of Afghan music. M. Slobin
52
minutes Colour 1986
Film maker: John Baily
This
film investigates and portrays the life of Afghan refugees living
in and around the city of Peshawar in northern Pakistan through
the experiences of the musician Amir. The aspirations of Afghan
refugees are expressed through their political songs dealing with
the civil war in Afghanistan, with exile, with Afghan nationalism
and with the Islamic revolution. In highly charged and tragic circumstances
music can be used in very direct ways, both to promote solidarity
and as an agent of catharsis. Amir
brings that musical power to the viewer.
The
city of Peshawar serves as the urban centre for the male refugee
population, where men go to look for work, to buy and sell goods,
for recreation and for religious purposes. The principal subject
of the film, Amir, is a professional musician who learnt his musical
skills as an orphan in Herat, a city in western Afghanistan with
strong musical traditions. Music is considered suspect in Islam
and fundamentalist Afghan religious leaders had prohibited it in
the camps where the majority of refugees live. In exile Amir took
up residence in the musicians' quarter of Peshawar and worked in
a band as the player of the rubab,
a plucked lute, a national instrument of Afghanistan.
Amir,
and the band of which he is a member, perform for both Pakistani
and Afghan patrons and play political music as well as the romantic
music of the past. Through following some of his daily activities,
visiting a shrine, negotiating with patrons and socialising with
friends and colleagues, we gain an insight into what it means to
be an Afghan refugee. We also gain insight into Amir as a person.
The depth of rapport that this film achieves with its principal
character, together with the
impressive cinematography (by Wayne Derrick who was then
a student at the National Film and Television School), make this
film a joy visually, musically and intellectually. Amir
would make an excellent contribution to courses in music, anthropology,
refugee studies, and multi-cultural studies.
John
Baily made this film during his training as an ethnographic film-maker
as a Leverhulme Film Fellow at the National Film and Television
School. He had come to know Amir earlier when carrying out ethnomusicological
research in Herat between 1973 and 1977. The film was awarded the
Special Jury Prize at the Cinquiéme Bilan du Film Ethnographiqueme
Bilan du Film Ethnographique 1986 in Paris, and the Award for Excellence
at the 1989 American Anthropological Association Film and Video
Festival. A study guide to accompany the film is available from
the RAI Film Officer, price £2.00. Catalogue
numbers, (16mm): 5RA147 £18; (VHS):RA/VHS147 £8.
J.
Baily, 1988. Music of Afghanistan:
Professional Musicians in the City of Herat. In J. Blacking
(series ed.) Cambridge Studies in Ethnomusicology. Cambridge University
Press, Cambridge.
J.Baily,
1990. The Making of Amir:An
Afghan Refugee Musician's life in Peshawar, Pakistan. A study Guide
to the Film. Royal Anthropological Institute, London.
V.
Doubleday, 1988. Three Women
of Herat. Jonathan Cape, London.
P.
English, 1973. `The Traditional City of Herat'. In L. Carl Brown
(ed.) From Medina to Metropolis:
Heritage and Change in the Near Eastern City. The Darwin Press,
Princeton.
D.
Mull and J. Mull, 1989. Review of the film. American
Anthropologist, Vol. 91, 836-38.
H.L.
Sakata, 1983. Music in the
Mind. Kent State University Press, Ohio.
M.
Slobin, 1988. Review of the film. Ethnomusicology,
Vol. 32, No.1, pp. 161-62.
H.
Zemp, 1988. Review of the film. Yearbook
for Traditional Music, Vol. 20, pp. 257-60.
If you are interested in hiring or purchasing this film please contact the Film Officer by or +44(0)20 7387 0455.
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