In Mapping Lessons we travel with K through time and place to a Middle East being colonized. This essay film puts struggles in conversation, from the early days of the Soviets, 1936 Spain, the Vietnamese resistance and the Paris Commune to the Syrian Revolution in 2011. All with the aim of preparing us for the next time.
في فيلم دروس خرايط نسافر مع ك عبر الزمان والمكان إلى الشرق الأوسط أثناء عملية استعماره. ما يفعله هذا الفيلم المقالي هو وضع النضالات المختلفة في حوار مع بعضها البعض، من بدايات المجالس العمالية (السوفييتات)، مرورا بإسبانيا ١٩٣٦ والمقاومة الفييتنامية، وبالعودة إلى كوميونة باريس، وصولا إلى الثورة السورية في ٢٠١١. وكل هذا بهدف تحضيرنا للمرة القادمة والزمن القادم.
“Mapping Lessons is a great political essay about facts but also about ideals, values, notions - we need more of this.”
- Nicole Brenez, lecturer in Cinema Studies at Sorbonne nouvelle & curator of the Cinémathèque française's avant-garde film series
“Mapping Lessons tackles one of the most important questions in the Syrian revolution. Incredibly powerful.”
- Yasser Munif, author of The Syrian Revolution: Between the Politics of Life and the Geopolitics of Death
Interviews/ reviews Teaching materials on Mapping Lessons
The publication About A World without Maps produced for the Kochi-Muziris Biennale features conversations between Philip Rizk and Linda Quiquivix, Vivien Sansour, Dirar Kalash, Yasser Munif, and a Syrian farmer named Walid, as well as Omar Aziz’s early conceptions on the local council in liberated territories. You can download the publication designed by the wonderful Salma Shamel here.
Filmmaker Philip Rizk on unexpected turns in revolutionary realities, from Egypt to Syria, FreeCityRadio, 19 Oct. 2022
Philip Rizk in conversation w/ Lynhann Balatbat & Laura Kloeckner for the workshop FOSSILISED SONICITIES. ON MAPPING LESSONS AND SONIC ARCHIVES @ Savvy Contemporary, Berlin, November 2021
Traces of a World without Maps by Philip Rizk
2011 is not 1917: On the use of Eutopian Images by Philip Rizk
Réactualiser les archives pour une histoire au présent : entretien avec Philip Rizk
من سوريا: أرضٌ وثورات ودروس حوار انريكو دي انجيليس مع ليلى الشامي وفيليب رزق
Q&A with Philip Rizk at the Ji.hlava Documentary Film Festival
مناقشة مع المخرج فيليب رزق عن فيلمه “دروس خرايط” يدير الحوار علي العدوي في أسبوع أفلام جوته
Philip Rizk, el cine que surgió de la revuelta en Egipto, El Pais, 28.12.2021
There will be Blood by Tomáš Krause, Dokrevue, 23.4.2021
ملاحظات حول أسبوع أفلام جوته بالإسكندرية، محمد أمين، 12 يوليو 2021
المخرج فيليب رزق: "دروس خرائط".. نظرة على أساليب الاستعمار وتجارب الاستقلال، راديو مونت كارلو، 28/07/2021
Texts, sounds & images on the Syrian revolution & revolutionary self-governance
Revolution in Every Country Comic Series: Episode 1 – Syria: Erasing an Inconvenient Revolution by Hisham Rifai & Ayman Makarem
Erasing people through disinformation: Syria and the “anti-imperialism” of fools – Yassin Al-Haj Saleh
Syrian Revolution: A History From Below (webinar series)
Challenging the Nation State in Syria by Leila Al Shami
Participatory Democracy and Micropolitics in Manbij - An Unthinkable Revolution by Yaser Munif
Syria's Last Bastion of Freedom by Anand Gopal | The New Yorker
Welcome to Free Syria, By Anand Gopal | Harper's Magazine
Self-organization in the Syrian people’s revolution by Ghayath Naisse
ON ALEPPO: A LETTER TO A HISTORIAN IN THE FUTURE by Samer Frangie
The roots and grassroots of the Syrian revolution
Standing with Syrians: An open letter to an anti-imperialist by Philip Rizk
Books:
Burning Country by Leila Al shami & Robin Yassin-Kassab
The Syrian Revolution: Between the politics of Life and the Geopolitics of Death by Yasser Munif
Shooting Revolution: Visual Media & Warfare in Syria by Donna Della Ratta
The writings of & about Omar Aziz, A Syrian anarchist:
Building alternative futures in the present: the case of Syria’s communes
Omar Aziz, “Abu Kamel,” 1949-2013: Biography, Readings, Quotes
الأوراق التأسيسية لفكرة المجالس المحلية بقلم الشهيد عمر عزيز
Featured Music
MUHARRAM 1392
by
Salah Ragab
Hartmut Geerken
Omar el Hakim
Hubertus von Puttkamer
Michael Ranta
(recorded Feb. 17, 1972, Heliopolis, Egypt)
unknown
Modest Mussorgsky
Remixed by Philip Rizk & Nadah El Shazly
Maryam, Maryamti
performed by
Aylin Çankaya
Ujamaa - Spirit of the ancestors - perseverance - Uhuru Ni Kazi
by Jay Hoggard
performed by Jay Hoggard & Anthony Davis
Öl- Musik
by
Kurt Weill
Ride of the Valkyries
Richard Wagner
Recorded by
American Symphony Orchestra, 1921
Remixed by Nadah El Shazly & Philip Rizk
Credits
Director, Editor & Producer
Philip Rizk
Editing Consultant
Mohamed Hassan Shawky
Supervising Sound Editor, Re-recording mixer & Sound Design
Max Schneider
Music Editor & Sound Editor
Nadah El Shazly
Music Supervisor
Philip Rizk
Translation
Farah Barqawi
Katharine Halls
Ma Hoogla-Kalfat (MaYo)
Featuring
Farah Barqawi
Walid
Aylin Çankaya
Saeed al-Wakeel
Matthieu Rey
Ahmed
Z.
M.
Osama al-Hossein
Supported by
Foundation for Arts Initiatives
DAAD Artists-in-Berlin Program
Developed at
AFAC Unspoken Series at Volksbühne Roter Salon
The Actors
(in the order of appearance)
Farah Barqawi is a Palestinian author, translator, performer, and feminist activist. Born in 1985 in Damascus, she spent her adolescence in Gaza, and currently lives in Berlin. Farah writes poetry, prose, and articles in Arabic. In 2018, she wrote and produced her first solo performance Baba, Come to Me, and has been performing it in festivals around Europe and the Arabic speaking region. In 2019, she produced and hosted the fourth season of the Arabic podcast Eib (Shame) by SOWT, tackling modern stories and issues related to love and relationships.
Walid is a Syrian farmer from the countryside of Idlib, Syria, who loves planting and would advise everyone to get into it, because it gives us love, security and positive energy.
Saeed al-Wakeel teaches Arabic literature at the University of Ein Shams, Cairo, Egypt.
Aylin Çankaya was born and grew up in Antakya, Turkey. She studied architecture in Eskişehir and İstanbul. Started to sing traditional songs in 2015 in İstanbul mostly on streets and bars, which she continues to do trying to survive as a singer.
Matthieu Rey is a French academic specialized in the French colonization of Syria.
Ahmed was the overseeing engineer of the methane gas project in liberated Daraa, Syria.
Z. is a member of the Bidoun Group who had been active in liberated , Syria.
M. was a volunteer fire fighter in liberated al-Atarib, in the countryside of Aleppo, Syria.
Osama al-Hossein was a member of the local council in liberated Saraqib, in the region of Idlib, Syria.
Cited films
(in order of first appearance)
Schastye (Happiness) - 1935 - USSR
Alexander Medvedkine
La Ultima Cena (The Last Supper) - 1976 - Cuba
Tomas Guiterrez Alea
Tumbleweeds - 1925 — USA
William S. Hart
Las Hurdes (Land without Bread) - 1933 - Spain
Louis Bunuel
Kino Eye - 1924 - USSR
Dziga Vertov
Man without a Star - 1955 - USA
King Vidor
Apache - 1954 - USA
Robert Aldrich
Octopussy - 1983 - UK
John Glen
Al-makhdu'un (The Dupes) - 1973 - Syria
Tawfiq Saleh
Stalker - 1979 - USSR
Andrei Tarkovsky
Khlib (Bread) - 1930 - USSR
Mykola Shpykovskyi
Winstanley - 1975 - UK
Kevin Brownlow & Andrew Mollo
La Hora de los Hornos (The hour of the furnaces) - 1968 - Argentina
Grupo Cine Liberación
Ispanija - 1939 - USSR
Esfir Shub
Train leaving station Jerusalem - 1897 - France
Lumiere Brothers
Man with a Movie Camera - 1929 - USSR
Dziga Vertov
Metropolis - 1927 - Germany
Fritz Lang
Triumph des Willens - 1935 - Germany
Leni Riefenstahl
Soy Cuba - 1964 - Cuba/ USSR
Mikhail Kalatozov
Loin du Vietnam - 1967 - France
Joris Ivens, William Klein, Claude Lelouch, Agnès Varda, Jean-Luc Godard, Chris Marker & Alain Resnais
Apocalypse Now - 1979 - USA
Francis Ford Coppola
Le Ciel, La Terra - 1966 - Vietnam
Joris Ivens
A Hundred Faces for one day - 1972 - Lebanon/ Palestine
Christian Ghazi
Assassinat de Kleber - 1897 - France
Lumiere Brothers
Marine Snow: The Origin of Oil - 1960 - Japan
Noda Shinkichi & Onuma Tetsuro
In search for Oil - 1954 - Netherlands
Bert Haanstra
Fitzcarraldo - 1982 - Germany
Werner Herzog
The Story of Petroleum - 1923 - USA
Bureau of Mines
The Gold Rush - 1925 - USA
Charlie Chaplin
In Old Oklahoma - 1943 - USA
Albert S. Rogell
La Via del Petrolio - 1967 - Italy
Bernardo Bertolucci
Der Brennende Acker - 1922 - Germany
F.W. Murnau
Bas Ya Bahr (The Cruel Sea) - 1972 - Kuwait
Khalid Al Siddiq
Lektionen in Finsternis (Lessons of Darkness) - 1992 - Germany
Werner Herzog
La Commune - 1999 - France
Peter Watkins
The Chronicle of the Years of Fire - 1974 - Algeria
Muhammad al-Akhdar-Hamina
A timeline for Mapping Lessons
1689
With the aim of legalizing the colonization of North America, philosopher John Locke writes:
"As much land as a man tills, plants, improves, cultivates and can use the product of, so much is his property."
1871
For 100 days, the Parisian proletariat set up a local council to govern their city.
1878
Zionists establish the first colony in Palestine called The Gate of Hope.
1917
The Russian Revolution ends the Tsar’s rule. In the countryside local councils―Soviets―redistribute the nobility’s land to the farmers who tilled it.
Soviet newspaper Pravda publishes the secret Sykes-Picot agreement, detailing a plan to divide up the spoils of World War I: the Ottoman Empire’s territories.
1917
British General Edmund Allenby enters Jerusalem on foot announcing the end of the crusades.
1919
Welcoming the fall of the Ottoman Empire, local councils initiate a period of self-rule in pockets across the region.
Volunteer fighters attack French military railway transports and mobilize to defend their land against the invading army.
1920
After a decisive victory in battle, the French army enters Damascus and shuts down the local councils.
1921
British and French colonizers demarcate borders of what will become the states of Syria, Palestine, Lebanon and Iraq with piles of stones.
The French redistribute collectively owned farmland―the mashaa’―to landlords collaborating with the occupation.
The British systematically destroy the mashaa’ because it obstructs colonial land settlement.
1920s
The colonized revolt against the French colonizers.
1930s
The colonized revolt against the British colonizers.
1932
The king of Egypt hosts a congress to rationalize Arab music according to European theory and notation.
1936
Across Spain local councils initiate an era of self-rule in villages, cities and workplaces.
1945
The French colonizers declare Syria an independent state based on its colonial foundation.
1948
Colonial powers welcome the establishment of the colonial state of Israel.
1987
The Palestinian intifada, led by popular committees, poses the biggest threat to the Zionist colonial project since its inception.
1992
Israel crushes the uprising by imposing a pseudo-state structure called the “Palestinian Authority.”
The president of Mexico alters the constitution to allow the privatization of ejido - - land, making up over half of the total land mass of the country.
1994
The Zapatista Army of National Liberation recuperate 2-3,000 mi² of plantation land and occupy seven municipalities in southern Mexico initiating a new era of autonomy
2011
In the wake of the January 25 revolution, popular committees across neighborhoods in Egypt provide security and community services.
Syrians echo the Tunisian chant “the people want the downfall of the system,” forcing the regime out of many parts of the country.
For a time, local councils initiate community self-rule in liberated territories across Syria.
Festival screenings
Ji.hlava Documentary Film Festival (Oct, 2020, World Premiere)
Torino International Film Festival
Qabes Cinema Fen
Goethe Film Days
Archival Assembly #1, Berlin
Sharjah Film Platform
London Palestine Film Festival
Regards Palestine, Montreal
The intervals series, Reina Sofia Museum, Madrid