10949 femmes
by BETI ELLERSON
Nassima Guessoum presenting 10949 femmes Courtesy of Nassima Guessoum |
Nassima Guessoum talks to us about her film10949 femmes "10949
Women" (2014), her passion for history, her research, the film shoot and
the experiences of those courageous women.
Nassima, what
motivated you to make the film?
I was motivated to
make the film for several reasons. First of all, I am bi-national, I am
Franco-Algerian. Although born in Paris, like many children of immigrants,
since my childhood every year I spent my summers in a village in Kabylia. Later
in 1999, I lived in Algiers almost a year to learn more about Algeria, from
within. Moreover, I did my studies on the history of the Arab world,
specialising in the history of the Algerian War of Independence. Despite all
the books available at the time and all the documentaries produced, I only saw
one approach, at the same time very factual, complete with events and policy
analysis, dates, figures, but not from a human point of view. In France one
spoke of "a war without a name"; for me, it was mostly faceless,
disembodied, especially in terms of the representation of Algerians. They were
all anonymous, commingled under the FLN acronym or labeled rebels. As for
women, they were invisible.
In 2004, Gillo
Pontecorvo's film The Battle of Algiers was released on the
screens in France. This film captures a key moment in the Algerian War of
Independence in 1957. He received the Golden Lion at Venice in 1966, though it
remained censured in France until 2004, for almost 40 years!!!!
In this film,
backed by the Algerian state and produced by Yacef Saadi, a
leader of the FLN who plays himself, women are seen for the first time. These
women were part of the groupes de choc as well as those who
planted bombs, carrying out terrorist actions. They are represented as using
their charms, their physical appearance and wearing European clothing to
deceive the soldiers of the French army.
From there I did
some research. The majority of women who were engaged in the struggle for
Algerian independence led political actions or were liaison officers or nurses
in the maquis. The “fidayines”, those who led armed actions of terrorism, were
very rare: the most famous, Djamila Bouhired was among the seven women
sentenced to death. She was defended by the lawyer Jacques Vergès, who became
her husband. None of the seven women were executed; their sentence was commuted
to life imprisonment. So I wanted to go beyond the image of the armed women, a
clichéd image used by both sides: on the Algerian side to show a heroic battle,
on the French side to show the FLN as "barbaric." Between the two, I
looked for real people, individuals, their political journey, and what created
them.
Nassima Hablal…
Nassima Hablal is a true pioneer. Head of household at 16, she began working in 1944.
She was one of the earliest women in the political movement who advocated for
the independence of Algeria. It is also because of her early political
engagement in 1945 that I was interested in her. She was 16 when she joined the
first political cells of the PPA, the party of the Algerian people, which
operated clandestinely. Moreover, and also unusual during this time, and for a
woman, who was also a "native", she was secretary to the
governor's office!!!
Then when the
revolution erupted in 1954, she was one of the first women to be contacted by
the political leaders of the FLN to work in the secretariat, but also to hide
the activists, etc ... She became the secretary of the CEC, the Committee for
coordination and implementation, which consisted of five very important
leaders.
This woman was an
activist from the age of 16 years, until the independence of Algeria in 1962.
She dedicated 17 years of her life, non-stop. This perseverance, this
conviction, this strength of character impressed me. During the war, she is
also the first woman who joined the UGTA (General Union of Algerian Workers),
Algeria's first free trade union. She was the only woman in this organization,
and with the officials she organised the famous 8-day strike in 1957.
Nassima Guessoum with Nassima Hablal during the filming of 10949 femmes Courtesy of Nassima Guessoum |
The film shooting...
I met Nassima
Hablal for the first time in 2007. I came back to see her in 2008 and I started
to film in 2009 for four years until 2013. As I explained to you before, I
wanted in this film that the history not be disembodied, that it be conveyed
through the character’s story. Through the cinematic apparatus, I was able to
induce and construct this closeness with Nassima Hablal. Hence, it was
important that this relationship actually exist, that it be the unifying thread
of the film. I did not film all the time, but when I did come, though
concentrated in time, I would say that I had pretty much daily contact.
Sometimes, as she
was an elderly lady—she was 80 years old when I filmed her for the first
time—she was not always at her best, other times she was sick or in hospital.
She is a free woman, funny, engaging, highly intelligent with an impartial viewpoint
and political analysis of a situation. She never showed bitterness or regret,
even though post-independence disappointment was very great.
It was this
freedom of spirit, of tone, of movement, this impossibility to
"assign" her that also influenced the way in which the film was made.
This is a story of an encounter, made of small means, of beautiful moments,
which develops into a relationship. Nassima was well aware of the thrust of her
words, what they conveyed.
Your
experiences with the women…
Nassima Hablal is
a person that really affected me. Her voice, her tone, her timbre, her songs,
resonate inside me. She introduced me to two wonderful people, two committed
women, generous and deeply sincere: Baya Taoumiya Laribi and Nelly Forget. In
the film, Nassima takes me to Baya’s house. Nicknamed Baya el Kahla, which
means the black one, because of her skin colour. She was twenty years old when
she joined the maquis of the NLA (National Liberation Army), where she served
as a nurse. She is also very funny. She traversed Algeria for nearly 700 km on
foot to reach the Tunisian border, where she was captured and endured
atrocities, including rape by French soldiers. She tells how her father, in
whom she confided, supported her during this painful time. In the film, she
tells me a very powerful phrase: "When one has been loved by her father,
she is not afraid of life. That’s it, my daughter."
This is obviously
not the whole story of Baya, who later became a midwife, but it is a very
important moment, which also recounts what women underwent in time of war. The
three women were tortured, only Baya revealed that she also endured gang rape.
She and Nassima met in Tunisia upon their release from prison in 1961. The
provisional government of the Algerian republic was based in Tunis before
independence.
Nelly and Nassima
knew each other before the war, through health and social activities. Nelly
came from France; she must have been around 23 years old when she offers to
work as a volunteer in the construction sites in the slums around the capital
Algiers. Nassima is also a volunteer. They meet in 1951.
They reconnect in
1957 in the Sesini villa, a torture centre. Nelly is not part the FLN, but is
accused of supporting and hiding members of the FLN. Hence, she is arrested and
tortured. At trial she is released. Nassima, on the other hand, "is a big
fish," she will be tortured in seven different centres, including forty
days in the terrible Sesini villa. She is sentenced to five years in prison.
One does not come
out the same after such encounters, and such stories.
The response
of the Algerian public...
The film was
screened as part of the Festival des Journées Cinématographiques in
Algiers, it received the award for best documentary. The audience was very
moved; there were young people, people of all ages. And I believe that the
scenario, the incarnation of history, of this modest and brilliant character
was something precious. Many people were crying. Really! The reception was
wonderful; also the critics in the press. Unfortunately, this was the only
screening there, while the film was shown twice in Morocco, in Egypt twice, it
was presented in Sudan, in Benin, and it will be in Turkey, and in several
festivals in France.
The
significance of the numbers 10949 in the title...
10949 women. This
is the official figure of the number of women who participated in the Algerian
war of independence (the number of women, identified in 1973 by the Department
of Veterans Affairs in Algeria). They were certainly more numerous in practice,
especially in the peasantry.
For me it is a
great honour that the film is in competition, representing Algeria.
Symbolically this is very important, the film puts things in perspective and
evokes certain thorny political issues in Algeria.
Whenever the film
wanders about, I am thinking to myself that Nassima Hablal and her friends also
journey, telling their story, our story, around the world.
Translation from French into English by Beti Ellerson
Centre for the Study and Research of African Women in Cinema | Centre pour l'étude et la recherche des femmes africaines dans le cinéma. AFWC
AFWC website www.africanwomenincinema.org
All rights reserved
NAU NUA | ART MAGAZINE edition
Edited by Juan Carlos Romero
All rights reserved
NAU NUA | ART MAGAZINE edition
Edited by Juan Carlos Romero
All rights reserved