“What a black day! We lost, and we did not even know it,” Shaykh Ahmad breaks down in tears as he listens to the televised speech of President Gamal Abdel Nasser revealing Egypt's defeat in June 1967 and announcing his resignation. Devastated, Yusuf, the journalist, remains silent with teary eyes, uttering one sentence only: “We think revolution. We write revolution. But we do not do revolution.” The shock on people's faces fills the eerie silence that engulfs shots of Egypt's abandoned streets, empty balconies, and Nasser's housing projects. Even Johnny, the drunken British sympathizer, stares at the television in disbelief. The young police officer Raʾuf covers his face with his hand in anguish, but shortly afterward, he and his love interest Fatima, take to the streets, joining the growing crowd aroused by Bahiyya's resilience and call of perseverance. “No! We shall fight again!” Bahiyya angrily shouts, confident that they will not give up. Caught off guard by the delirious masses, the security official retreats into the building fearfully.Footnote 1
With these images and words, Youssef Chahine ends his film al-ʿUsfur (The Sparrow, 1974), in which he recreates a historic moment in Egypt's memory.Footnote 2 This process of reimagining and reconstructing the emotional responses of Egyptians to shocking news of the defeat, first in words and then in images, did not materialize until at least three years after June 1967. From contemporaneous press, we know that the idea of the film was presented to the censorship committee in September 1970, that the script was finalized a year later, in 1971, that filming concluded sometime in July 1972, and that it was banned for two years before its commercial release in 1974 following the 1973 October War.Footnote 3 During these six years, from 1967 to 1973, Egypt witnessed major historical events—a war of attrition, student demonstrations, labor protests, publicized tribunals, Nasser's death, the “corrective revolution,” and more—all impacting the public's perception of the reasons for and the meaning of the defeat in one way or another. Chahine, like most artists and intellectuals of the time, was not immune to these tremors. In addition to representing the emotional responses of Egyptians to the sudden revelation of the scale of the defeat, al-ʿUsfur expresses Chahine's understanding of the causes of the defeat, blatantly accusing the government of being responsible for it. This perception of the defeat, however, is missing in his two previous films, al-ʿArd (The Land, 1970) and al-Ikhtiyar (The Choice, 1971), in which he also addresses the defeat but attributes it to other factors, to the exclusion of any visual expression of anger or hopeful ending is also missing in his two previous films. In this article, I examine the different emotional responses of Chahine and, by extension and association, Egyptian cineasts and critics on the heels of the defeat, tracing their change between June 1967 and October 1973, when Egypt retaliated by launching an attack on Israeli positions in the Sinai Peninsula, and the possible connection of these emotional responses to the existing understandings of the defeat at the time.Footnote 4
Writing the Emotional History of the Defeat
Many scholars have addressed the 1967 war in their studies, exploring the origins and the aftermath of the war, mostly in the context of diplomacy, the military, or regional and Cold War politics.Footnote 5 Recent work, however, has been devoted to a revisionist history of the war that employs a variety of Egyptian sources to focus, among other things, on the relationship between Nasser and Field Marshal ʿAbd al-Hakim ʿAmr, and the institutions they represented (the ruling party and the army respectively), as a lens through which to reexamine the events leading up to the war, the war encounter itself, and its immediate consequences.Footnote 6 Studies with an emphasis on the war's repercussions on the social, intellectual, and cultural life in the Arab world, particularly Egypt, are substantial as well. From the polarization of thought as a reaction to the war to the many ways it was expressed in popular culture, these scholarly contributions have enriched the historiography of the 1967 war and complicated its narratives.Footnote 7 Yet the scholarship dedicated primarily to the study of emotions on the heels of the war remains scarce and disproportionate to the magnitude of the defeat, the consequences of which, in the words of historian Sherene Seikaly, “continue to constitute of the present.”Footnote 8
In al-Mamarr (The Passage, dir. Sherif Arafa, 2019), for example, an Egyptian feature film that dramatizes the events between June 1967 and October 1973, with a particular focus on the War of Attrition, the memory of the defeat is still intertwined with a sense of loss, shock, and disappointment, as is evident in the first twenty minutes of the film, which briefly depict the military mobilization on both sides, the attack on Egyptian airfields, the withdrawal of Egyptian troops (against the will of some officers), and the reaction of the main characters—notably, the scene in which Colonel Nur, loses his temper after being subjected to humiliation and ridicule by fellow Egyptians. Like Chahine's films, al-Mamarr is grappling to make sense of what happened, but it perceives the defeat differently. The defeat is treated teleologically as an event that had to happen, both in reality and on film, for the victory of 1973 to occur. As such, emotions such as loss and shock take second place to a desire for retaliation, which becomes a plot device that moves the narrative forward.
In fact, al-Mamarr may serve as an excellent example of how emotions have been treated in scholarly studies. We know from existing literature that emotions or emotional states, such as disillusionment, despair, and shock, were commonplace in the cultural and intellectual scene on the heels of the defeat, and some scholars have argued that these states played a role in creating a productive force that was translated into a proliferation of cultural products, polarization of thought, radicalization of action and critique, alienation of youth, and prevalence of religious miracles.Footnote 9 However, little attention has been given to why there were various emotional responses to the defeat, why it was these responses specifically, and what impact the discussion, or recognition, of the origins of the defeat has had on these responses. In this article, I argue that emotional responses to the defeat were not only factors of change—as most of the existing scholarship has implied—but also were indicators of change, mainly in the apprehension of the meaning of the defeat. As such, the emotional response to the defeat was neither singular nor static, but was multifaceted and continuously shifting, for such responses were, and still are, influenced, conditioned, and informed by several internal and external dynamics, be they socioeconomic, political, intellectual, cultural, or military. In this article, I will only focus on the responses of Chahine and his circle—a particular group of cultural producers—between 5 June 1967 and 6 October 1973, when the defeat started being viewed through the lens of a victory.
Emotions are regarded in this present article not as unconscious sensations but as the outcome of a cognitive appraisal of an eliciting situation.Footnote 10 According to historian Barbara Rosenwein, emotions are closely tied to values and assessments; they cannot be studied out of context, for they depend “on the narratives that people use to make sense of themselves and their world, and on the accepted or idiosyncratic modes of expression that are employed to communicate them.”Footnote 11 In integrating the history of emotions into the histories of the 1967 war, particularly the cultural and intellectual histories, I hope to emphasize certain connections and relations between emotions and the situations that elicited them—not the defeat per se, but the different perceptions of the defeat, along with its causes and meanings—that would otherwise have remained unexplored.
Moreover, I draw on two distinct theoretical propositions put forward by the history of emotions and film studies. The first challenges the “methodological subordination of visuals to language in the negotiation of meaning.”Footnote 12 The second argues that a character's “expressions of emotion . . . are semiotic discursive constructs designed by filmmakers.”Footnote 13 Both, however, suggest that a combination of visuals, music, sounds, narrative events, and popular references may represent a particular emotion without it being explicitly named or mentioned in the film. As such, I contend that films were the medium in and through which Chahine not only expressed his reaction to the defeat but also tried to make sense of and give meaning to what happened and recreate what he felt.
Youssef Chahine's films have garnered a lot of critical and academic attention from many scholars across disciplines and languages, and he, along with Salah Abu Sayf, remains the most studied Egyptian filmmaker to date.Footnote 14 Although I build on many of these studies and borrow from their insights, my focus in this paper is not his life and career, his film language and style, his ideological and philosophical concerns, his success and reputation in and outside of Egypt, his national and transnational project, or the representation of history, society, and culture in his films at large. I center my argument on the expression of emotions in al-Ard, al-Ikhtiyar, and al-ʿUsfur , tracing their changes and connections to what was happening behind the scenes, be it the general film scene or the wider cultural and intellectual scenes. Although some would argue that Chahine's films are the least representative of Egyptian society in its entirety, they, like any other film, remain “an integrative site for a wide range of discourses, as a nodal point of intersecting voices.”Footnote 15 Films are products of a collaborative and multilayered process, which makes them an apt source for exploring the “emotional communities” in which they were produced and screened.Footnote 16 This circle or community, whose members often share similar interests and goals at a certain period, may include film administrators, producers, directors, writers, actors, editors, music composers, and critics, who engaged with Chahine's films or worked on them. By juxtaposing these three films with contemporaneous essays, films, songs, interviews, and the press, I expand the focus from Chahine to the artistic and intellectual circle to which he belonged.
Even though other Egyptian directors did address the defeat in their work, the advantage of focusing on Chahine's films is twofold: first, these three films were critically acclaimed and, in the case of the first two, widely viewed.Footnote 17 Second, Chahine remains the only director to produce three feature films in response to the defeat between June 1967 and October 1973. It is, therefore, important that we study these three films as a compound work. Individually, al-Ard, al-Ikhtiyar, and al-ʿUsfur speak to their immediate presents, each with a specific “space of experience” and “horizons of expectation.”Footnote 18 Combined they embody a “crisis of time” in Egyptian history.Footnote 19 Writing in January 1974, a few months after the October War, film critic ʿAbd al-Munʿim Saʿd remarked, “On the morning of that immortal day [6 October 1973], and after six years of darkness—since the setback of June [1967], history had ceased to move, everything had come to a halt . . . history has restarted its path through victory.”Footnote 20 As a trilogy then, these three films constitute an ideal case study in which patterns, continuities, and changes in the emotional response of a particular emotional community, comprised of an artist and his creative collaborators in conversation with fellow artists, critics, and intellectuals, during a period that falls between a defeat and a victory, can be traced.Footnote 21
Al-Ard (The Land, 1970)
In January 1970, ʿAbd al-Hamid Juda al-Sahar, head of the public film sector in Egypt, received a letter with all the highly favorable foreign reviews of the recently screened Egyptian film in Paris, al-Ard.Footnote 22 The sender was none other than the director himself, and the reviews were indeed flattering.Footnote 23 The film went on to represent Egypt at the 1970 Cannes Film Festival. Although it remained the object of critical acclaim, its director Youssef Chahine returned to his country sans Palme d'Or.Footnote 24 On the home front, it did not take long for al-Ard to become a box office hit. The film was well received by critics and journalists, who commended Chahine for promoting a sense of “collective heroism” in a film that itself was the product of “collective experience.” As reflected in some local film reviews, the critics and journalists were able to decipher its message as well.Footnote 25
Set in rural Egypt in the 1930s, al-Ard narrates the class struggle between peasants and their pasha. Infuriated by the government's decision to reduce the already inadequate irrigation period from ten to five days, the peasants decide to sign a petition objecting to the new orders. When their peaceful efforts prove futile, however, they resort to mutiny, each diverting the water to their land. The shortage of water soon inflames a feud between the peasants, of which the pasha takes full advantage. He eventually carries out his scheme to confiscate the land, on which he plans to build a private railroad that leads to his new palace. The film ends with the torture, or even the implied death, of the main protagonist, Abu Swaylim, a brave peasant who performed heroic deeds against the British in his youth.
Al-Ard is a filmic adaptation of a 1953 socialist-realist serial of the same title (published as a novel afterward).Footnote 26 It was performed and broadcast as a serial on the radio in 1960 and then as a television play two years later, in 1962, both of which were received well by critics.Footnote 27 The success of this serial in all of its adaptations and its message may have played a huge role in convincing the Egyptian public film sector to include it in its 1967–68 plan to fund the production of committed films and raise the standard of Egypt's cinematic production.Footnote 28 Hasan Fuʾad, a leftist intellectual and artist, was commissioned to write the screenplay (both the scenario and the dialogue) for the film.Footnote 29 In 1967, Chahine, who defined himself as “leaning towards the left,” was approached by the public sector to direct the film.Footnote 30 Throughout the preproduction period, the writer and director worked together, along with ʿAbd al-Rahman al-Sharqawi, to turn the 600-page novel into a 200-page script, constantly changing the storyline.Footnote 31 The result of this collaboration was, according to some critics, a “neorealist fresco” that “draws on a Marxist dialectic” to depict “a situation with its stratified social classes, and in which the most well-to-do crushes the peasants.”Footnote 32
In al-Ard, Chahine follows in the footsteps of many Egyptians before him who perceived and used the peasant as a national signifier to construct a sense of a unified nation, for, as anthropologist Ted Swedenberg notes, “peasants seem to be particularly suitable for making claims about the distinctness of national identity.”Footnote 33 The opening sequence, a close-up shot of Abu Swaylim's hands gently caressing the soil, establishes both the subject matter and the theme of the film. Chahine seems to hint that his film is not about land or a peasant, but about the strong connection between them, each being the extension of the other. “[The peasant's] state, in fact, his very existence,” Susannah Downs argues, “is linked to that of the land.”Footnote 34 This connection is further developed in the ending sequence, which illustrates Abu Swaylim's refusal to give up his land in yet another close-up shot, but this time of his bleeding hands clutching the soil tightly as his body is forcefully and violently dragged behind soldiers on horses.Footnote 35 This disturbing, tragic ending—a powerful montage of close-up shots of his brutally beaten face, hands bleeding and then holding on to the soil—evokes a palpable sense of resistance and sacrifice on the part of the peasant.Footnote 36 All of which is echoed in the lyrics of the film's original song that accompanies this sequence:
In making this movie, Chahine might have been reflecting on and incorporating some of the post-1967 prevailing sentiments, some propagated by the state, others by cineasts and the press. Shortly after the war ended, Minister of Culture Tharwat ʿUkasha had called upon cineasts to produce films that aimed at “a conscious mass mobilization that could prepare the masses for a long and hard struggle through a number of films, which valorize bravery, patience, sanctification of duty.”Footnote 38 Under ʿUkasha's directions, the public film sector produced a series of short films, known as ‘aflam al-maʿraka (films of the battle), to uplift people's morale, a step that was embraced by cineasts. In one editorial, the prominent director Ahmad Badrakhan stressed, “The role of art in battle is no less important than that of lethal weapons, for it is art that mobilizes national sentiments.”Footnote 39 In the press, moreover, hundreds of editorials that were written right after the defeat, like the opening note in the July 1967 issue of the leftist journal al-Taliʿa (The Vanguard) entitled “The Revolution Continues . . . the Battle Is Still Raging . . . and Victory Is Our Ally,” which argued that Israel won because of its “deceptive and dirty” means while highlighting the Egyptians’ willingness to continue their struggle and sacrifice until victory was achieved.Footnote 40 Here, the defeat of both Abu Swaylim and Egypt, at the hands of the pasha and Israel respectively, seems unavoidable when taking into consideration the “barbarian advances,” but the consolation for the former, “the defeated,” as Schivelbusch describes, “is their faith in their cultural and moral superiority over the newly empowered who have ousted them,” which fuels their determination, bravery, and desire to fight back.Footnote 41 These sentiments were evident enough that critic Samir Farid called them one of the reasons Zionists reputedly tried to block al-Ard from being screened at the Cannes Film Festival.Footnote 42
An examination of and comparison between the novel and its cinematic adaptation reveal that Chahine and his scriptwriter Fuʾad introduced new scenes. One specific scene is the close-up shot of the officer's hand shaving Abu Swaylim's mustache after imprisoning him for defying orders.Footnote 43 Because a mustache is a symbol of manhood in Arab culture, as many scholars have noted in their analysis of this scene, its forceful removal depicts an act of emasculation intended to cause humiliation and shame. In the following scenes, the once-proud protagonist is transformed into a tearful, silent character who, when not idly touching his now absent mustache, covers his face behind his scarf, keeps to himself, and withdraws from others—all of which are symptoms of a traumatic experience.Footnote 44 The odd yet symbolic one-minute silent shots of an almost deserted village after the prison scene would become a recurring motif in Chahine's cinematic language when addressing the defeat (a more extended silent sequence showing deserted streets and buildings appears in al-ʿUsfur as well, just a few seconds before Nasser's televised concession speech). A similar interpretation of the defeat can be found in a note written by the editor in chief of the popular Egyptian journal Ruz al-Yusuf on June 10, 1968, exactly a year after the defeat and around the time al-Sharqawi, Fuʾad, and Chahine were working on al-Ard's script:
This week last year . . . we seemed to have lost everything . . . even hope for life . . . we came to face something like confusion . . . we died of pain and sorrow as we looked toward our lost land . . . an outcome that not even the most pessimistic of us did expect . . . a trauma that strikes the sanest mind with shock . . . and a defeat that wounds the pride.Footnote 45
When Abu Swaylim's friend, Shaykh Hassuna, tries to comfort him by telling him that they have been in jail before, for both the land and the 1919 revolution, Abu Swaylim sorrowfully replies, “What about dignity (karama)? What is left when that is lost?”Footnote 46
A more critical look at al-Ard, however, offers us another possible explanation for the defeat than one caused at the hands of a brutal, wrongful enemy, one that projects pre-defeat sentiments onto the defeat. Having lived mostly in Lebanon since 1964, where he made films such as Bayyaʿ al-Khawatim (The Ring Seller, 1965), Chahine decided to return to Egypt after the 1967 war. “I was born again after the defeat through the pain it caused me and my hope to overcome it,” Chahine notes, “al-Ard is a conscious expression of that.”Footnote 47 In an interview with Farid, Chahine explains that he left Egypt a few years before the defeat because his own experience with the public film sector made him realize that “the socialism he dreamed of . . . turned into bureaucracy and authoritarianism, and how the bureaucrat became the king of his time.”Footnote 48 This disappointment, or shaken belief, in the revolutionary regime and the efficacy of its administration can be sensed in other films produced before the defeat, such as al-Mukharibun (Saboteurs, dir. Kamal al-Shaykh, 1967), al-ʿAyb (Shame, dir. Jalal al-Sharqawi, 1967), and al-Mutamaridun (The Rebels, dir. Tawfiq Salih, 1968). In al-Ard, this feeling is represented in two scenes, the ending sequence being one of them, a scene that remained a point of contestation among Chahine, Fuʾad, and al-Sharqawi. Fuʾad insisted on an end in which the young teenager with whom both the film and the novel start (a boy who is pursuing his education in the city returns to his village for the summer) leaves the village and abandons his ancestor's land for good.Footnote 49 Chahine, however, chose to conclude his film with an open end: the implied death of the protagonist Abu Swaylim. Both endings depict a sense of cynicism that did not appear in the original novel (in which the boy leaves the village with a promise to return and not forget it), but Chahine's may reflect uncertainty about Egypt's future. Al-Sharqawi, writing just after the 1952 revolution, was hopeful about Egypt's future, insinuating that the revolution would end the peasants’ struggle and oppression. Deeming it necessary to face the reality of the defeat and its consequences, Chahine wanted to depict “the world more realistically,” and a society that was still struggling, in which peasants continued to suffer despite the regime's land reform and redistribution project.Footnote 50
The second scene takes place after Abu Swaylim's imprisonment. Through the words of Abu Swaylim, who was addressing his friends Shaykhs Hassuna (the intellectual cleric) and Yusuf (the national capitalist) along with other villagers following their failure to find a solution to the irrigation problem, Chahine expressed his disillusionment with the socialist regime, the nationalists, and the religious clerics:
During the 1919 Revolution, we fought alongside Saʿd [Zaghlul] Pasha. . . . They beat us. They locked us up. Many of us died. But we were men, and we stood our ground like men. . . . Those were the good old days. We were chivalrous, kind-hearted men. We were the pride of the country. Its honor and its glory. And here we are now, talking, complaining, and wailing like women. . . . Our days are empty words. Our nights are empty words. Our silence is empty words. Our lives are made of words over words.Footnote 51
According to Youssef Chahine's biographer, Ibrahim Fawal, it is in this scene, and this monologue precisely, that Chahine wanted to delineate his conviction “that [the] spirit of patriotism and duty has dissipated. Nothing is left of it but the memory.”Footnote 52 In this regard, the defeat, Chahine seems to argue, was not only caused by a brutal enemy but started within Egypt—with a failed regime and a fractured society. Al-Ard, therefore, is a product of its time in the sense that, although it regards the defeat as a wound to national pride caused by an unjust enemy, it also highlights the resilience of some Egyptians, their loyalty to their land, and their willingness to die for it. At the same time, it also reflects, to some extent, their disillusionment with the regime—an emotion that would only intensify in the following months and years.
Al-Ikhtiyar (The Choice, 1971)
“If al-Ard is the epitome of Youssef Chahine's realism . . . his film al-Ikhtiyar is the beginning of a new phase in his artistic life . . . a phase that is free of traditional, linear narrative, in which the story does not unfold in a logical sequence.” This came from film critic ʿAbd al-Wahab al-Sharqawi in 1976, almost five years after the initial release of al-Ikhtiyar.Footnote 53 On the surface, al-Ikhtiyar is about an opportunistic writer who murders his identical twin out of jealousy. Sayyid is a well-respected intellectual who married into money, is always eager to rub elbows with cabinet members, and lives in a sterile and lifeless apartment, a metaphor for his personality. Mahmud, on the other hand, is a free-spirited sailor who exudes warmth, positivity, and irrepressible energy, from whom his brother regularly draws inspiration. When Sayyid reads in the newspaper that a body was recently found with a sketched face that looks exactly like him, he believes it is his brother. Sayyid soon becomes the investigators’ prime suspect, but much to their chagrin, Mahmud reappears, and the case is permanently closed. Despite their efforts, the investigators fail to bring the twins together under one roof (throughout the film, Mahmud and Sayyid are never seen together), leading to the suspicion that one is impersonating the other. Sayyid/Mahmud eventually loses his sanity, and the film ends as he is being put in a straitjacket and taken away in an ambulance.Footnote 54
Although al-Ikhtiyar won the Golden Tanit at the Carthage Film Festival in 1971 and did relatively well at the box office, critics were conflicted about it.Footnote 55 It remains a problematic film that people continue to read differently and may need to watch more than once to understand. The regional Bulletin du centre interarabe du cinéma et de la télévision (Beirut) reported that some local critics had “accused [Chahine] of making a film which sacrificed too much to aesthetic considerations.”Footnote 56 And although some Egyptian critics and film enthusiasts interpreted the film the way its director intended it to be understood, many viewers did not.Footnote 57 In his review, critic Saʿd al-Din Tawfiq reports to the reader that, during the premiere of the film in Cinema Rivoli in Cairo, some theatergoers were confused, interrupting the film with their shouts, “We do not understand a thing!”Footnote 58 To be sure, it is from Chahine's interviews that we know with some certainty that he made al-Ikhtiyar in response to the defeat. “When the film was made,” Chahine clarifies, “it was necessary, both politically and socially, to tell the story in this manner . . . we were exhausted and very confused, and the film had to be similarly constructed.”Footnote 59 In another interview, he reiterates, “The film deals with a troubled, undecided state of mind; such a subject can only be illustrated by shocking or confusing images.”Footnote 60 Chahine's words, an eclectic style of editing, the camera angles and movement, the choice of music, the nonlinear narrative, and the twisted story line that does not provide the viewer with a clear ending reflect the state of doubt, confusion, and uncertainty that intensified after the defeat.
If “al-Ard was about a man who said ‘no,’” Chahine explains, “al-Ikhtiyar [was] about a man who said ‘yes’” and abandoned his commitment to his true self, and by extension, his society.Footnote 61 To a question about the sociopolitical aspect of al-Ikhtiyar, Chahine replies:
In this film, I wished to sound the alarm. Al-Ikhtiyar is a direct attack on the static condition of Arab intellectuals today, which may even be described as passivity. This applies especially to the intellectuals of my country, Egypt. I accuse them of having failed in their social and political task by their silence, by the concessions that they have made during the past few years to their own comfort and well-being. They have become bourgeois and self-satisfied, whereas they should be at the head of the revolutionary movement.Footnote 62
This alarm, as critics noted, was visually expressed in the very final shot of the film—the close-up shot of the siren light of the ambulance.Footnote 63 In light of Chahine's explanations and the film's symbolic expressions (the opening credit scene being one of them), it becomes clear that the plot of al-Ikhtiyar revolves around a deeply conflicted but opportunistic intellectual who is repressing his more honest and committed self to achieve the luxurious lifestyle that his power-seeking, material self has always dreamed of. As film critic Qussai Samak eloquently puts it, al-Ikhtiyar is about an impotent “intellectual who is conscious of the ailments of his society, and yet is a part of the establishment that perpetuates them.”Footnote 64
The production of al-Ikhtiyar started in November 1969 when Egypt was still recovering from student and workers upheavals and in the midst of an exasperating, inconclusive war of attrition—a period of tension and instability. When Chahine approached Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfouz with a script for a film (they had previously collaborated on two films—Jamila (1958), and al-Nasir Salah al-Din (Saladin the Victorious, 1963)—Mahfouz noticed the similarities between the proposed plot and one of his novels.Footnote 65 It was no coincidence that these two men had the same idea in mind: the conditions and experiences prevailing in Egypt at the time were the cause. Mahfouz had recently collaborated with scenarist Yusuf Francis to turn Ihsan ʿAbd al-Qudus's Biʾr al-Hirman into a film (Well of Deprivation, dir. Kamal al-Shaykh, 1969), whose protagonist, like Sayyid in al-Ikhtiyar, suffers from schizophrenia. Nadya (dir. Ahmad Badrakhan, 1969) is yet another protagonist who is impersonating another character, this time her sister. What is common among these three protagonists is that they are confused, insecure, anxious, and repressing their other self. Although all three belong to the same class, the new bourgeoisie, Sayyid is the only intellectual among them. He also is the only protagonist who does not have a happy ending, for, unlike the other two, he refuses to confront himself and his reality.
In fact, Sayyid's character resembles to a great extent “the clever personality” that Syrian philosopher Sadiq Jalal al-Azm highlights in his book Self-Criticism after the Defeat (first published in 1968). Coined by the Egyptian social scientist Hammid ʿAmmar, “al-shakhsiya al-fahlawiyya,” or the clever personality, is defined as nothing but “an abstraction and pattern . . . that describe individuals in a specific social environment.”Footnote 66 Among the properties of this personality is the “constant search for the shortest and fastest route to realize particular goals and aims,” with a certain tendency toward “hiding defects and maintaining an appearance in front of others.”Footnote 67 Referencing one of Nasser's speeches, in which he stresses the need to “admit the failings around us,” al-Azm argues that Nasser was, in fact, aware that this clever personality was “as widespread in the ranks of the military forces as it is in traditional Arab society.”Footnote 68 It seems that Chahine too was trying to highlight in al-Ikhtiyar, particularly through Sayyid's character, the failure of some Egyptian intellectuals “to acknowledge their sickness [in the aftermath of the defeat] and instead deny the fact of the illness in their behavior, expressions, delusions, and hallucinations because they are unable to bear the reality of the situation.”Footnote 69
At the time when Chahine was writing al-Ikhtiyar, a massive wave of criticism and self-criticism was sweeping not only Egypt, but the entire Arab world. Most of the editorials in the Egyptian press were still discussing the deeper dimension of the defeat, delineating how the defeat was the “by-product of many errors that have been accumulating in the Arab world, politically, economically, socially, and intellectually.”Footnote 70 In the same vein, Muhammad Hasanayn Haykal, then editor in chief of al-Ahram, writes, “ a new era of political work is dawning in Egypt, an era that requires a great deal of focus, even if it is in the form of criticism.”Footnote 71 This criticism was not restricted to the political sphere, but reached all aspects of society. The so-called crisis of intellectuals that received on and off attention from the press from the early 1960s onward reached an all-time high in the wake of the defeat. Popular culture too was not spared. “Between 1967 and 1970, the biggest conflict in the history of Egyptian cinema erupted,” Samir Farid writes, “as several film associations emerged thanks to the committed and revolutionary young filmmakers and critics, who fought a huge battle against the public [film] sector, along with its corrupt management, pitting the new cinema against the prevailing one.”Footnote 72 Another example was the 1968 song “al-Hamdu li-Allah Khabatana Tahta Battatina” (Thank God He Hit Us under Our Armpits) composed by Shaykh Imam, with lyrics by the poet Ahmad Fuʾad Najm, which immediately became a hit and was very popular among students. In the song, the duo blatantly criticized Nasser and his regime, which, not surprisingly, culminated in their arrest.Footnote 73
As a film director, Chahine was not alone in articulating criticism through cinematic production. According to critic and former chief of censorship and minister of information, Durriya Sharaf al-Din, the post-1967 authorities, anticipating a latent revolution, “showed a glimmer of green light,” allowing a bit of criticism in artistic creations, including film production.Footnote 74 Kamal al-Shaykh's Miramar (1968), Salah Abu Sayf's al-Qadiyya 68 (Case 68, 1968), Husayn Kamal's Shayʾ Min al-Khawf (A Bit of Fear, 1969), and Tharthara Fawq al-Nil (Adrift on the Nile, 1971) are four examples of highly critical Egyptian films, categorized by Sharaf al-Din as “green light cinema,” that were produced around the same time Chahine was working on al-Ikhtiyar.Footnote 75 As historian Joel Gordon writes, “each film, however different from the others, spoke directly to issues of corruption, authoritarian rule, opportunism, and social decay—a revolution betrayed by its servants.”Footnote 76 Chahine seems to imply through al-Ikhtiyar that among the factors that aggravated the situation in the wake of the defeat were the greed and expediency of some intellectuals, and that the journey to recovery must start from deep within to find one's true identity.
Unlike the protagonist in al-Ard who did not cause his own defeat—that is to say, it was caused by an external enemy—Sayyid is complicit in his own undoing. Chahine does not spare himself from these accusations, for he identifies himself with Sayyid in many instances in the film. It was reported that Chahine even wanted to play the role himself, but the production company (the public film sector) did not approve.Footnote 77 In one scene, an official in the Ministry of Culture expresses his appreciation of Sayyid's artistic work, asking him about the source of his fictional characters, “What about Qinawi? [. . .] and Hanuma? Where do you come up with these people?”Footnote 78 Anyone familiar with Chahine's cinema would recognize Qinawi and Hanuma as the main characters in his 1958 film Bab al-Hadid (Cairo Station), in which Qinawi was not only played by Chahine himself, but, like Sayyid, also was led off in a straitjacket at the end of the film.Footnote 79 And just like Sayyid, both Chahine and the cowriter of al-Ikhtiyar, Mahfouz, along with many intellectuals and artists, were at one point affiliated with the public film sector, a state body that operated under the auspices of the Ministry of Culture.Footnote 80 It is this self-reflexivity that makes it plausible to claim that Chahine, through al-Ikhtiyar and Sayyid's character, was expressing feelings of guilt about the defeat. “I have personally run away from problems,” Chahine admitted to critic Yusuf Sharif Rizq Allah, “but not anymore.”Footnote 81
From a study by historian Salah ʿIsa published in 1986, we know that Chahine was not alone in this journey of self-blame; “every intellectual set up a court for himself through his work, in which the feeling of humiliation and betrayal intensified, along with a need for bravery to confront oneself.”Footnote 82 Chahine, indeed, does not stop at self-criticism and self-blame; he goes further by suggesting solutions. Not surprisingly, every one of his intended clarifications is proffered by none other than Mahmud, the only character who stays true to himself. To a question about freedom, he answers, “To be free is to be a slave to truth and truth only.”Footnote 83 When he is asked, “What is the truth, O’ Mahmud?” he confidently responds, “It is being faithful to one's self, first and foremost.”Footnote 84 What Chahine seems to insinuate through these words is asserted in playwright Saadallah Wannous's 1968 play, Haflat Samar min Ajl 5 Huzayran (An Entertainment Evening for June 5): “While this attack showed clearly the brutality and dangers of imperialism, it showed even more clearly our need to see ourselves, to look into our mirrors and ask: Who are we? And why?”Footnote 85
Al-ʿUsfur (The Sparrow, 1974)
Whereas al-Ard interprets the defeat as the result of both external and (to a lesser extent) internal factors, and al-Ikhtiyar condemns the opportunism and “irresponsibility of the intellectuals after the defeat,” al-ʿUsfur openly accuses the government of being responsible for the defeat, simply by not fulfilling its promises of development and transparency.Footnote 86 Al-ʿUsfur is a collective product that is composed of different audiovisual media (radio and TV broadcasts, documentary footage, and newspapers), seeking to reconstruct a certain moment in time—the 1967 war—and not just reflect it. In this regard, it is very different from the two previous films. Al-ʿUsfur culminates in a powerful reenactment of the popular demonstrations that took place on June 9 and 10, shortly after Nasser's televised resignation. Clearly, the story that this film recounts is not that of the military leaders or intelligence figureheads, but that of the ordinary Egyptians, which compelled film critic Frantz Gévaudan to praise Chahine for making “a film for and about the masses.”Footnote 87
Around the same time Chahine was cowriting the script with Egyptian intellectual Lutfi al-Khuli in 1971, members of the Egyptian press were still preoccupied with identifying the roots of the defeat. In his famous editorial Bi-saraha (Honestly), published every Friday in al-Ahram newspaper, Haykal asks, “So, how were we defeated in 1967? Why were we defeated? What was defeated in us? And how can we remedy this situation? And when?”Footnote 88 As is depicted in its opening message, al-ʿUsfur embodies Chahine's attempt at answering these queries:
All these sincere and courageous people, these sparrows that I love, did not hesitate to flock into the streets in June 1967 to express their readiness to take on the new challenge . . . To all these people, today we try, through al-ʿUsfur, to illuminate [a] few of the national and international elements which they, without their knowledge, became victims to.Footnote 89
By the time Chahine started filming al-ʿUsfur in 1971, the public film sector, the producer of his two previous films, had been shut down, forcing him to look for an alternative sponsor, which he found in the Office national pour le commerce et l'industrie cinématographique in Algeria.Footnote 90 Unlike al-Ard and al-Ikhtiyar, al-ʿUsfur was produced after Nasser's death in September 1970 and Anwar al-Sadat's al-thawra al-tashihiyya (corrective revolution) in May 1971, which instigated the gradual collapse of Nasser's legacy, including the public sector. Already from the late 1960s onward, losses of the public sector in different industries were much mentioned in the press, and subsequent efforts were made by the government under Nasser to rectify previous errors. Accusations ranged from lack of advanced planning on the part of the government to blatant corruption among those in charge of the sector. In al-ʿUsfur, Chahine, who had a turbulent relationship with the public film sector—mainly due to his work on al-Nas wa-l-Nil (People of the Nile, 1972), an Egyptian-Soviet docufiction production—weighs in on this matter through the words of one of his protagonists, the journalist, who incidentally is named Yusuf: “Take the factory, for example, it has been on the cusp [of opening] for six years. And this cusp seems endless, lost between this pharaoh and that pharaoh, who, in turn, are also lost between thirty million other so-and-sos like you and me. But the pharaohs stole the factory . . . without leaving a single machine behind.”Footnote 91 In a later scene, one that takes place during the June 1967 war, Yusuf wanted his editor in chief to publish a piece on these neglected public sector projects, to which the latter responded: “We are under aggression, and you want us to write about machines and a ruined factory?” Yusuf's next line, “With this, we create causes of war,” poses more questions than answers; is he talking about the state's negligence of its projects or the intellectuals who turned a blind eye? In al-ʿUsfur, both are to blame.Footnote 92
Al-ʿUsfur encompasses three interconnected subplots: “the theatrical preparation for the pathetic debacle of the war and the subsequent shock waves it sent among the people; a conspiracy of a large-scale theft from a public sector company planned by some big wigs in the government; and the security forces chasing a dangerous outlaw in the countryside.”Footnote 93 The narrative revolves around four main protagonists: 1) Yusuf, an optimist journalist following the case of Abu Khidr,an outlaw accused of theft, feels betrayed by his father who happens to be a “lawful thief”—a term referring to corrupt statesmen; 2) Raʾuf, a young officer who is in charge of finding and arresting Abu Khidr, not only discovers that the man who has raised him was not his biological father, but that he is corrupt as well; 3) Shaykh Ahmad, whose brother was murdered by Abu Khidr, decides to take matters into his hands when the state fails to provide him justice; and 4) Bahiyya, a compassionate, strong working-class woman whom Chahine, through his protagonists, refers to as Umm al-Dunyya (mother of the world, a reference to Egypt), who is admired and cherished by all, and whose house becomes a refuge of sorts.Footnote 94 All four protagonists are victims of deception, but they, as every character in the film, are chosen “to show the very subtle mechanism of internal corruption that infiltrates all the social strata of the society.”Footnote 95
Al-ʿUsfur was banned shortly after its release, primarily because of its direct political message, as “it sheds light on leadership errors . . . which [the censorship advisory committee unanimously agreed] might reflect badly on Egypt's image, not only among its citizens, but among Arabs and the international community as well.”Footnote 96 Another censor deemed the screening of a film about the defeat when Egypt was witnessing a corrective revolution redundant.Footnote 97 According to actor Sayf ʿAbd al-Ruhman, who played Raʾuf in the film, Minister of Culture Yusuf al-Sibaʿi reputedly lost his temper upon watching al-ʿUsfur and immediately asked for the film negatives, for he thought the film was targeting his brother and accusing him of being one of the corrupt officers Chahine blamed for the defeat.Footnote 98 Luckily, the negatives were with Chahine in Paris, and because the film was a joint production with an Algerian company it represented Algeria, not Egypt, in international competitions and screenings. Although banned in Egypt, al-ʿUsfur was favorably received in Iraq, Lebanon, Morocco, and Tunisia, and “the Algerian newspaper El Moudjahid described it as ‘the first Arab film which politically goes some way towards analyzing a situation and determining the objective cause of that situation.’”Footnote 99 The film went on to be part of the Directors’ Fortnight at the 1973 Cannes Film Festival, garnering international acclaim. However, by emphasizing internal factors of the defeat rather than the role played by the external enemy and its imperialist allies, Chahine and his film attracted heavy criticism from some Arab critics, who accused him of treason and called for his execution, as reported by journalist Raʾuf Tawfiq.Footnote 100
In 1974, after the October War, the Egyptian government lifted the two-year ban on al-ʿUsfur, “since the October battle has successfully put an end to the setback . . . and since the psychological atmosphere of the audience has changed with this victory, there is no fear of [it evoking a sense] of bitterness among viewers.”Footnote 101 In its second release, the film flopped at the box office. To a question about the impact of the ban on him, Chahine replied:
My experience in al-ʿUsfur has taught me that films, however long they remain banned, will be released one day. I am proud to be able to show al-ʿUsfur after the October War, although [the fact that it was shown after the war and not before] has weakened its impact and muted its message.Footnote 102
Although the message of al-ʿUsfur was very clear, one can only ponder the impact that Chahine was seeking. The reason for its weakened impact, however, may be attributed to the fact that, when it was finally released, Egyptians saw al-ʿUsfur through the gaze of victory, no longer that of defeat. The October War seemed to have mended, perhaps only temporarily, some of the wounds caused by the defeat, and more importantly it had managed to mitigate feelings of frustration, betrayal, and anger—all of which were evident in al-ʿUsfur—although anger seems to be the emotion that Chahine wanted to evoke in his audience.
On top of its explicit political stance, the film visually portrays the different emotional reactions that Egyptians experienced when the Voice of the Arabs (Sawt al-`Arab radio service) falsely declared victory, and then the moment they knew Egypt had lost the war. Like the culmination it was meant to be, “the culmination of the post-1967 era,” al-ʿUsfur highlights some stages through which the Egyptians, including Chahine, attempted to come to terms with the defeat—shock, grief, and anger, the last of which had not appeared in al-Ard or al-Ikhtiyar.Footnote 103 Chahine's acceptance of the defeat—a particular type of defeat—becomes very evident in this film, as is his anger toward the state for failing its people. “The defeat was not that of the masses,” Chahine argues, “but of the government.”Footnote 104 Chahine, however, refuses to surrender, just like the female protagonist in his film, Bahiyya, who swears she will never give up. After listening to Nasser's televised concession, she runs out into the streets, screaming: “No! I, Bahiyya, am saying no! We shall fight again!” According to Chahine, this scene describes “a major turning point in [his] life,” for it embodies a critical moment in Egyptian history, the demonstrations of June 9 and 10.Footnote 105 Those people took to the streets, according to Chahine, with one purpose in mind: to declare that the defeat was not of the revolution, but of those who were in charge of it. What is striking in al-ʿUsfur, moreover, is that hope is the sentiment that follows anger—a sort of hope coupled with vengeance, a hope that is embodied by the masses’ readiness to fight until victory is achieved. These sentiments also are echoed in the lyrics of the film's song, another collaboration between Shaykh Imam and Ahmad Fuʾad Najm:
Chahine was not alone in expressing a call for action or articulating hope for rising again.Footnote 107 Around the time he was writing and filming al-ʿUsfur, Egypt was undergoing what Schivelbusch would have described as a levée en masse (mass mobilization). Periodicals and state media were brimming with articles, reports, and slogans intended to rebuild the trust between civilian society and the military and to belittle the enemy—a strategy which, according to Schivelbusch's analysis of the culture of defeat, aimed at “replacing the troops’ exhausted morale with the still vital spirit of the nation itself.”Footnote 108 The imminent possibility of retaliating against Israel—of avenging the losses of 1967—generated hope among Egyptians. Even the title of the film was chosen specifically to express the people's desire for freedom, beautifully visualized by the shot of the sparrow leaving its cage, flying over the masses as they chant, “Long live Egypt!”Footnote 109 These feelings are not only portrayed and propagated in al-ʿUsfur, but they also were transpiring behind the scenes. In an interview with al-Jazeera, Egyptian director ʿAli Badrakhan, who was the assistant director of al-ʿUsfur, remembers:
When we were filming the scene of the demonstrations, I had the task of shouting “we shall fight, we shall fight” to prompt the background actors who were playing the part of protestors. I was shouting, and the extras were chanting after me “we shall fight.” People in their houses heard us, opened their windows, and started cheering and chanting with us, “We shall fight! We shall fight!” They then joined us in the street and the demonstration transformed into a real one.Footnote 110
Conclusion
Cinema has been treated in this article as a medium inextricably bound up with the social, political, and intellectual transformations of post-1967 Egypt. As such, Youssef Chahine's films (al-Ard, al-Ikhtiyar, and al-ʿUsfur), commonly referred to as the “trilogy of the defeat,” are viewed as an historical window through which an analytical assessment of the emotional state of a particular emotional community in the wake of the defeat can be achieved. In making these films, Chahine was trying to answer the same question that many Egyptian artists, intellectuals, and ordinary people had been asking since the end of the 1967 war: “Why have we been defeated and what steps must be taken to remedy the situation?”Footnote 111 Through his films (especially al-ʿUsfur), Chahine was reassessing a past moment to understand his present, but what he ended up doing, in fact, was also the opposite. His understanding of the defeat was affected by his present, and by the many factors that transpired between June 1967 and October 1973, from the 1968 demonstrations to the corrective revolution in 1971, passing through the war of attrition, Nasser's death, and a series of crises affecting all aspects of society, including the very medium he used, the cinema. This meant that the interpretation of the defeat kept changing.
I have tried to show too the interconnection of the perception of the defeat and the emotional response to it. Aside from shock, loss, and grief, which were emotions that existed throughout these six years irrespective of the assumed causes of the defeat, other sentiments were contingent on how the defeat was interpreted and understood. Humiliation and shame appeared when the defeat was perceived as being caused by a brutal, immoral enemy, or by ineptness and corruption on the home front; the emergence of guilt was linked to an understanding of the defeat as being the outcome of one's actions or passivity; disillusionment and anger were triggered by other sentiments such as betrayal, deception, and acceptance that the defeat was caused by the empty promises of a corrupt regime; and a growing need for vengeance evoked hope and euphoria.
To a question about al-ʿUsfur, following its screening at Cannes, Chahine remarked, “the reaction of the Egyptian people on the heels of the defeat was extremely positive.”Footnote 112 But would he have thought or said the same when working on al-Ard or al-Ikhtiyar? Chahine could only think or say that in 1973, because by then the “crisis of time” engendered by the defeat was nearing its end. The conditions of possibility in summer 1973—instigated by mass media campaigns that constantly glorified the strength of Egyptian military and readiness for war, which, incidentally, resembled to a great extent the campaigns on the eve of the 1967 war—differed from those of earlier years following the defeat, and Chahine's “horizons of expectation” changed accordingly. Unlike al-Ard and al-Ikhtiyar, al-ʿUsfur's ending is positive and hopeful, for victory seemed to be expected, if not the next day, then the day after.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank Beth Baron, Joel Gordon, Samira Haj, Dagmar Herzog, Christopher Stone, and the three anonymous reviewers for their helpful feedback on draft versions of this article. I also am grateful to my colleagues in the history program and the Middle East dissertation writing group at the CUNY Graduate Center who read the article at different stages and helped in thinking about its argument and structure.