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These Oscar-Nominated Documentaries Tell Intimate Stories Of Syria's Civil War

<em>Watani: My Homeland</em> follows Hala Kamil and her family as they move from Aleppo, Syria, to a small German city that welcomes refugees.
Alina Emrich
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Courtesy of Dish Communications
Watani: My Homeland follows Hala Kamil and her family as they move from Aleppo, Syria, to a small German city that welcomes refugees.

The oft-overlooked Oscar category of best documentary short has a dramatic theme this year: Three of the five films nominated are about Syrians, and each offers an intimate, eye-witness account of the devastation in that country.

One of the shorts, The White Helmets, follows a group of civilian volunteers in Aleppo who search for and rescue bombing victims. They're the only first responders left and they've saved tens of thousands of people, digging them out from the rubble. (The sound of bombs blasting can be heard throughout the film.)

"They began with nothing," says filmmaker Orlando von Einsiedel, who's based in the U.K. "They began, you know, clawing at the rubble with their bare hands. ... They are the closest things Syrians have to superheroes."

The film's stunning footage was shot by then-teenage Syrian photographer Khaled Khatib, who volunteers with the White Helmets. His camera follows them running into smoky crossfire just after the bombings.

In one key scene, rescuers stop to carefully listen for the faint cries of a newborn baby. He's been trapped under a three-story building for more than 16 hours. "They pull him out and he's completely unharmed," von Einsiedel says. "Apart from being dehydrated, he hasn't got a single scratch on him. It's the most extraordinary footage." The men cheer and call him a miracle baby.

<em>The White Helmets</em> follows a group of Syrian civilian first responders. They're named for the white construction helmets they wear as they run into bombed-out buildings.
/ Courtesy of Netflix
/
Courtesy of Netflix
The White Helmets follows a group of Syrian civilian first responders. They're named for the white construction helmets they wear as they run into bombed-out buildings.

Von Einsiedel says his documentary is ultimately a hopeful story in the midst of tragedy. "One of the great things about documentary is its ability to create empathy. And, you know, there's so much misunderstanding particularly at this moment about Muslims and people from places like Syria. We hope our film helps create bridges."

Since the film was shot, the White Helmets have stayed in Syria, where they continue to save lives; but hundreds of thousands of other Syrians have had to flee the country. The nominated short 4.1 Miles documents part of the treacherous journey some of them make.

Named for the distance between Turkey and the Greek island of Lesbos, the film captures a day in the life of a Greek coast guard captain. Kyriakos Papadopoulos and his crew rescue groups of Syrian refugees clinging to flimsy dinghies in the Aegean Sea.

Daphne Matziaraki made the film for her journalism master's project at the University of California, Berkeley. She traveled to her native Greece to film Papadopoulos and his crew pulling women and children onto their 15-foot boat with ropes and their own hands. The captain is seen trying to revive unconscious children and get them to safety.

<em>4.1 Miles</em> spends a day with Greek coast guard captain Kyriakos Papadopoulos as he and his crew pull Syrian refugees out of the Aegean Sea.
Daphne Matziaraki / Courtesy of the 2050 Group
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Courtesy of the 2050 Group
4.1 Miles spends a day with Greek coast guard captain Kyriakos Papadopoulos as he and his crew pull Syrian refugees out of the Aegean Sea.

"This man is a true hero," Matziaraki says. "He, as a human being, feels this enormous responsibility to just respond and to save every life that he can. ... It is his nightmare that he might have left somebody behind. Or when he loses somebody ... and he cannot revive the child or he cannot get fast enough to his dock, that haunts him."

The third of these films, Watani: My Homeland, documents the lives of Hala Kamil and her four children, who, at the beginning of the film, live in an abandoned building in eastern Aleppo. Filmmaker Marcel Mettelsiefen shows Kamil's husband, Free Syrian Army commander Abu Ali, shooting from atop a bombed-out building, followed by scenes of their young daughters crying or playing with toy guns, pretending to be what they call "ISIS girls."

"They were playful, incorporating their environment into their games," Mettelsiefen says. "I think it's the secret of how children are able to adapt to anything."

Mattelsiefen was working as a photojournalist when he first met Abu Ali. He was shocked when the Muslim man invited him to film his wife and children. "That's unbelievabl[y] rare that a man allows me to speak to his wife and that she's even able to be filmed and that I'm able to spend days with them."

In fact, Mattelsiefen spent three years with the family. In that time, Abu Ali was kidnapped by ISIS and Kamil and the children fled, eventually making their way to a small German city that welcomes refugees. Mattelsiefen follows them on their journey. "We have seen enough fighting, shooting, dying," he says, "and I wanted to tell the story of how do these people survive."

Mattelsiefen plans to escort Hala Kamil to the Oscars ceremony on Sunday. Daphne Matziaraki, the director of 4.1 Miles, is bringing Kyriakos Papadopoulos, and White Helmets filmmaker Orlando von Einsiedel is bringing his cinematographer, Khaled Khatib, as well as Raed Saleh, the leader of the White Helmets.

Update on Tuesday, Feb. 28: Raed Saleh and White Helmets cinematographer Khaled Khatib did not attend the Oscars ceremony on Sunday. After accepting the award for best documentary short, White Helmets filmmaker Orlando von Einsiedel told NPR, "Raed Saleh ... couldn't come in the end because the last couple of days in Syria the violence has really escalated and he does life-saving work and he decided in the end his time was better placed to do that. And Khaled Khatib, our cinematographer, we're confused about this, too. The last two weeks have been very difficult. He had a U.S. visa, he tried to board a plane and he wasn't able to come. We're very sad about that."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

As an arts correspondent based at NPR West, Mandalit del Barco reports and produces stories about film, television, music, visual arts, dance and other topics. Over the years, she has also covered everything from street gangs to Hollywood, police and prisons, marijuana, immigration, race relations, natural disasters, Latino arts and urban street culture (including hip hop dance, music, and art). Every year, she covers the Oscars and the Grammy awards for NPR, as well as the Sundance Film Festival and other events. Her news reports, feature stories and photos, filed from Los Angeles and abroad, can be heard on All Things Considered, Morning Edition, Weekend Edition, Alt.latino, and npr.org.
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