AN
APPRAISAL
A FILMMAKER WHO FOUND AFRICA’S
VOICE
By A. O. SCOTT
The New York Times, 6/12/07
Ousmane
Sembène, by consensus the father of African cinema, was nearly
40 when he started making films. (He was 84 when he died over the
weekend at his home in Dakar). By 1960, the year that Senegal, his
native country, won its independence from France, he was already
a novelist of some reputation in Francophone African circles.He
had also played a significant role in political and aesthetic debates
that had gathered force as the postwar movement toward African decolonization
accelerated. He took a radical, pro-independence line against what
he took to be the assimilationist tendencies of proponents of Négritude,
the more established literary movement associated with writers like
Aimé Césaire and Léopold Senghor.
Senghor, a poet and scholar (and the first African elected to the
Académie Française), went on to become Senegal’s
first president. (He died in 2001.) Mr. Sembène, in his role
as Africa’s leading filmmaker, would remain a thorn in Senghor’s
side, as uncompromising a critic of Africa’s post-liberation
regimes as he had been of French colonial domination.
In a 2004 interview with “L’Humanité,”
the daily newspaper of the French Communist Party (which Mr. Sembène
joined as a dockworker in Marseilles in the 1940s), he noted that
“in more than 40 years since Senegal’s liberation we
have killed more Africans than died from the start of the slave
trade.”
In films like “Ceddo” and “Xala” he pointed
an angry, often satirical finger at the failures and excesses of
modern African governments, Senghor’s in particular, and his
unsparing criticism made him a controversial figure.
Nonetheless, it is hard to overstate his importance, or his influence
on African film and also, more generally, on African intellectual
and cultural self-perception. Mr. Sembène was in many ways
not only Senghor’s political and aesthetic antagonist but
also his biographical and temperamental opposite. Senghor, who had
received an elite education in metropolitan France, believed, at
least in the 1950s, that Africans in territories ruled by France
could carve out an identity for themselves within the larger cosmos
of French language and civilization.
Mr. Sembène, whose formal schooling ended in the sixth grade,
received his French education not at the École Pratique des
Hautes Études in Paris, but rather on the Marseilles docks
and in the radical trade union movement. Like Sékou Touré
and Frantz Fanon, his allies in the radical wing of the anti-colonialist
movement, he believed that Africans would experience true liberation
when they threw off European models and discovered their own, homegrown
versions of modernity.
“What was unique about Sembène was he began to challenge
the dominant figure, Senghor,” recalled Manthia Diawara, a
professor of Africana studies at New York University who grew up
in Mali in the 1960s. “He valorized African languages over
French. He began to say that independence had failed. He celebrated
the equality of Africa with Europe. And it was very good for us
to see a man who was self-taught, who did not come out of the French
educational system, who went on to write these books.”
The books were quickly superseded by his films. “I came back
to Dakar, and I made a tour of Africa,” Mr. Sembène
told L’Humanité, reflecting on his return home in 1960
after nearly 20 years in France. “I wanted to know my own
continent. I went everywhere, getting to know people, tribes, cultures.
I was 40 years old, and I wanted to make movies. I wanted to give
another impression of Africa. Since our culture is primarily oral,
I wanted to depict reality through ritual, dance and performance.”
And so he developed a filmmaking style that was populist, didactic
and sometimes propagandistic, at once modern in its techniques and
accessible, at least in principle, to everyone. He frequently made
use of nonprofessional actors and wrote dialogue in various African
languages.
“The publication of a book written in French would only reach
a minority,” he said. In contrast, he envisioned a “fairground
cinema that allows you to argue with people.”
The arguments take place within his films as well as around them.
In “Moolaadé” (2004), one of his last movies,
a group of women rises up against the traditional practice of female
genital mutilation, challenging the authority of the village elders
as well as of the priestesses who perform the ritual. The film’s
structure is antiphonal (given Mr. Sembène’s Marxist
background, you might say dialectical), allowing the defenders and
opponents of tradition to have their say before justice and enlightenment
prevail.
Like all of Mr. Sembène’s films — he made 10
features in all — “Moolaadé” is grounded
in African daily life. And yet, to a non-African viewer, it rarely
feels exotic or strange. As an artist, Mr. Sembène was both
a populist and a universalist.
“He showed us a way out of tribalism,” said Mr. Diawara,
an expert on African cinema (and the co-director of a 1994 documentary
about Mr. Sembène) in a recent telephone interview. “Sembène’s
films are translatable. They’re never going to be blockbusters,
but you can show one of them in China, in France, in Africa, in
the United States, and people will know what it’s about.”
Mr. Sembène was thus a thoroughly African artist, one who
achieved global stature by virtue of his concentration on local
matters. He may, indeed, have found a bigger audience at international
festivals outside Africa than he did at home. But that may have
more to do with global conditions of distribution than with the
movies themselves, which are lively, funny, pointed and true.
Mr. Diawara recalled a story that Mr. Sembène liked to tell
about his travels across Africa in the ’60s. Mr. Sembene had
finished showing his film “Money Order” in a small town
in Cameroon when he was approached by a local policeman, whose attention
made him a little nervous.
“Where did you get that story?” the officer wanted to
know. Mr. Sembène replied that the plot, which chronicles
the chaotic and corrupting effects of money from France on a Senegalese
family, was his own invention. “But it happened to me,”
the policeman said.
TO READ GUY FLATLEY'S 1969
NEW YORK TIMES INTERVIEW WITH OUSMANE SEMBENE, CLICK
HERE.
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