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Gaddafi turns screenwriter for $40m epic about Italian invasion

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  • Gaddafi turns screenwriter for $40m epic about Italian invasion

    Gaddafi turns screenwriter for $40m epic about Italian invasion
    By Peter Popham in Rome

    The Independent/UK
    Published: 03 November 2007

    The mercurial dictator of Libya has reinvented himself yet again. He
    has been a pariah of the West; a sponsor of terrorism; the maverick
    autocrat with his corps of female bodyguards; the man who comes to
    Brussels for a summit, erects his tent and puts his camels out to graze
    in the local park.

    Thirty years ago with his little Green Book and his "Third Universal
    Theory", he proposed himself as the Mao Zedong of the Middle East,
    fashioning what he claimed to be a new ideology from the patriarchal
    customs of his clan.

    But today Libya is in a different place. The worst of its diplomatic
    headaches are behind it ` Lockerbie dealt with, the nuclear plants
    dismantled, the Bulgarian nurses ransomed ` and the world is keen to do
    business. And now the ruler is trying on a new hat. Meet Muammar
    al-Gaddafi: screenwriter.

    A series of impressionistic sketches he has written evoking his country
    as it was on the eve of invasion by Italy in September 1911 ` placid,
    rustic, traditional ` and then as it roused itself to fight to expel
    the foreigners, is to become the basis for a film costing at least $40m
    (£19.1m) which begins shooting in Libya next year.

    Aimed principally at a non-Arab audience, and entitled Dhulm ` Years of
    Torment, it will tell the story of Libya's traumatic experience at the
    hands of Europe's Johnny-come-lately imperialists.

    To the other European powers, it was hard to take Italy seriously as a
    colonial force. Its first adventure, against the supposedly easy target
    of Ethiopia, ended in the worst defeat ever suffered by a European army
    in Africa. Libya, just across the pond from Sicily, was thinly defended
    by a small Turkish garrison, at a time when the Ottoman Empire was on
    its knees. It was expected to be a pushover.

    Instead, after quick early success, Italy found itself embroiled in an
    insurgency that dragged on for the next 20 years. The Libyans became
    the first people in the world to know the terror of air bombing, among
    the first to be gassed from the skies, and were early guinea pigs for
    the concentration-camp concept. Unable to break their spirit, Italy
    resorted to driving them across the border into Egypt and Chad. Ramzi
    Rassi, the Lebanese producer of the new film, says that by the time the
    Italians fled home in 1943, one-third of the Libyan population had been
    killed and one-third forced into exile.

    In his treatment for the film, Gaddafi describes the beauty of his land
    before the coming of the new Romans. "Tripoli ... a string of white
    buildings painted with the local lime ... Behind it stretches the deep
    blue sea, its light waves shimmering, and much clearer in the distance
    the wide open horizon..."

    Seen from the other side of the Mediterranean it all looked so
    different. For Italy, unified for a bare half century, the invasion of
    the Ottoman province of Tripolitana e Cirenaica was a chance to prove
    its worth as a martial country. "The great proletarian nation has
    stirred!" declared Giovanni Pascoli, the Italian poet, as the invasion
    got under way.

    Dhulm ("injustice" in Arabic), will tell the story of the invasion and
    the long Libyan resistance through the eyes of those who experienced
    it, based on real people. One of the main characters is an
    extraordinary journalist called Francis McCullagh from Dungannon in Co
    Tyrone, who really deserves a biopic all to himself. In October 1911,
    his zest for action unsated, he crossed the Mediterranean with the
    invading Italians. "He came over with the invasion force," says Mr
    Rassi, "and later wrote a book about the invasion almost in the form of
    a script. He is one of the characters in the film, as an eye-witness of
    what happened."

    Dhulm is not Col Gaddafi's first venture into film. In 1980 his regime
    paid $30m to make Omar Mukhtar: Lion of the Desert, an epic about Omar
    the Bedouin schoolteacher who became the legendary leader of the Libyan
    resistance, and fought on well into his seventies until he was captured
    by the Italians and hanged in front of 20,000 of his Bedouin followers.
    Lion had an improbably glittering cast, including Anthony Quinn as
    Omar, Oliver Reed as the Italian commander who tries to track him down
    and Rod Steiger as Mussolini. But Arabs were deeply unpopular at the
    time of its release in 1983 thanks to Opec's price rises and other
    factors (including Gaddafi himself), and the film sank without trace.

    Is the world readier now to hear Libya's tale of woe? Mr Rassi says it
    should be. "We see Armenians and Jews talking about genocide ` Libya
    wants the truth about what happened there to be exposed, too. It's not
    just Gaddafi but the people as a whole: the degree of popular support
    for the film project is huge. And the international politics are more
    favourable to the idea of the film today than ever before."

    Yet the first stumbling block is Italy, which shows little inclination
    to confront what it did across the water. Mr Rassi and the director of
    the film, the star Syrian TV film-maker Najdat Anzour, were in Rome
    this week promoting Dhulm, but with the exception of one piece by an
    Arab journalist, the film project has been ignored. Italian politicians
    are willing to talk about reparations, including a Gaddafian proposal
    that they build him a whopping autostrada, gratis ` but just don't
    mention the war. When Lion of the Desert was released, it was banned in
    Italy on the grounds that it was "damaging to the honour of the Italian
    army" and has still never been shown there.

    But it is time Italy made the effort ` and the rest of us, too: not
    merely to recognise the suffering inflicted, to understand better what
    this country went through, and how the bitterness of a people subjected
    to such treatment can fester for generations without a full accounting.
    But also to understand and deal with the delirious joy that accompanied
    the rape of Libya.

    Begun on the cusp of the First World War, the Libyan invasion incubated
    the bacillus of Fascism. And the horror of it was meat and drink to
    Europe's new utopians. Another journalist who crossed the Mediterranean
    to report on the war was Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, poet and founder of
    the Futurist movement. For him, the Italian forces behaved far too
    well: he denounced their "stupid, colonial humanitarianism". He
    believed more violence was required. "We want to glorify war," ran the
    Futurist Manifesto, "the only source of hygiene in the world `
    militarism, patriotism, the destructive act." For these Europeans,
    Libya's "liberation" was the apogee of modern civilisation.

    Now of course we know different. "It was one of the ugliest forms of
    colonialism," says Mr Rassi, "with a scale of brutality that is
    unimaginable, covering the whole population. Yet very little is known
    about it. It is easy to understand why."
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