DIPLOMATIC CALENDAR
Argentine envoy hosts film screening
Ambassador Ivan Ivanissevich welcomed diplomats and guests to the screening of a documentary film about the last dictatorship in Argentina, in the 1970s, at PNCA’s lecture hall.
The film was screened as part of the United Nations Human Rights through Cinematography series, celebrating 70 years of the International Declaration of Human Rights, which a UN Information Centre representative drew attention to at the event.
H.I.J.O.S. El Alma en Dos (Sons and Daughters: The soul in two) by Argentine filmmakers Marcelo Cèspedes and Carmen Guarini was made in 2002, and tells the stories of sons and daughters as they remember their loved ones who were arrested, tortured and often killed, or disappeared, as it was called, during Argentina’s far-right dictatorships between 1974-83.
More than 8,000 socialists and others disappeared. “Nobody knows the exact figure,” said Ambassador Ivanissevich, who felt that many parts of the film were difficult to watch.
He added that not all details in the film were accurate because it was a blend of fiction and nonfiction. The film focused on memories, militant ideals, resistance, the intelligentsia and ordinary people, and how to honour loved ones who risked everything but were silenced.
Ambassador Ivanissevich emphasised that the military in the 1970s was entirely separate from society, and that explained much of why it could rule so ruthlessly. “Today, the military is entirely different,” he said.
“I found the film very important, but I am not sure it was a good film,” said a Pakistani lawyer who attended the event. “Yet, it made us all reflect on the dangers of extreme military rule,” he added.
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