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A little known-aspect of Australian history
Serenades, directed by Mojgan Khadem
By Richard Phillips
4 June 2001
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Serenades, Mojgan Khadem's first full-length feature
film, attempts to dramatise a little-known aspect of life in late
19th century Australia: the role played by Afghan cameleers in
outback South Australia and the social relations between these
contract workers and their families, and local Aborigines and
German missionaries.
Khadem's film, which is a serious but not entirely successful
effort, tells the story of Jila, a part Afghan and part-Aboriginal
young woman who falls in love with the son of a Lutheran missionary.
The fictional tale, which is set in 1890, after Afghan cameleers
established regular transport links to the Killalpaninna Lutheran
mission in the far north of South Australia, traces Jila's efforts
to free herself from the moral and religious demands of the conflicting
outback communities.
During the last four decades of the 19th century and the first
years of the 20th, Afghan cameleers formed the core of every major
expedition into Australia's central desert region and provided
transport and communication links with sheep and cattle farms,
mining projects and religious missions on the desert fringe. Their
camels, which foraged on semi-desert plants and could go for days
without water, were faster and cheaper than horse or bullock transport.
As the demand for this transport increased, hundreds of Afghans
travelled to Australia on three-year work contracts. Low wagesin
the 1880s between £3 and £4 a month or about a quarter
of the amount paid to bullock team driversensured that most
remained in Australia. Many married and established families.
Afghan settlements, later known as Ghantowns, sprang up around
shipping ports and outback railheads in South Australia, New South
Wales, Queensland and Western Australia.
Soon after Serenades opens, one of the cameleers, Shir
Mohammed (Sinisa Copic), is involved in a sexual relationship
with Wanga, an Aboriginal woman, as payment for gambling losses
incurred by local Aborigines. While Jila is conceived out of this
union, Shir Mohammed, like the scores of other Afghan cameleers
constantly on the move throughout the outback, does not learn
that he has a daughter until some years later.
Jila (Katayla Williams) is raised by Rainman, her Aboriginal
grandfather, and in the first phase of her life is taught traditional
Dreaming stories. She also learns to read and write at the Lutheran
mission where she becomes best friends with Johann, son of the
mission pastor. The childhood friends are separated when Shir
Mohammed learns that he has a daughter and takes the young girl
from the mission and raises her as a Muslim.
The film moves on 10 years and Jila (now played by Alice Haines)
is a young woman attempting to assert her independence from her
father's restrictive religious moral code. Shir Mohammed tells
Jila that he will determine her life and whom she can marry. If
I tell you to marry a monkey, he tells her, you'll
say, where are the bananas? To complicate matters, Johann
(Aden Young), Jila's childhood friend, returns from Germany where
he had been sent for specialised music training. On his journey
back to the mission he stays at the Afghan settlement and renews
his acquaintance with Jila.
Johann and Jila begin to fall for each other but Shir Mohammed
has other ideas. He has organised for Jila to marry Mullah Jalal-Shah
(Nico Lathouris), the local Muslim priest. An outraged Johann
attempts to circumvent this arrangement by offering a higher bride
price. Shir Mohammed angrily rejects this offer, declaring
that he will only allow a Muslim to marry his daughter. You
Christians think you own everything in this land, he shouts
at Johann.
A despondent Johann returns to the mission but finds he is
increasingly out of step with its life. Meanwhile Jila, who is
about 30 years younger than the mullah, decides to poison herself
at the wedding feast rather than marry the priest. But Jila's
desperate plans go astray when the mullah accidentally takes the
poison and falls seriously ill. Distraught by what she has done,
Jila flees the Afghan settlement. The old man recovers and instructs
Shir Mohammed to find Jila and return her to the marriage. According
to strict Muslim faith, if she has been with another man Shir
Mohammed must kill her.
Jila seeks refuge in the Lutheran mission but is turned away
by Pastor Hoffman (Bille Brown), Johann's authoritarian father,
and she heads into the desert. Distraught and disoriented by the
conflicting religious demands and afraid that her father will
kill her, Jila attempts to find solace in her Aboriginal upbringing.
She covers herself with religious markings and begins performing
ceremonial dances.
Shir Mohammed tracks her down, however. In one of the film's
emotional climaxes, he decides to allow the young woman her freedom,
while devising a scheme to fool the mullah into believing she
has been killed. At the same time Johann, who has been in conflict
with his father, breaks with the mission, denouncing its values.
Johann locates Jila and the film concludes with the couple united
in the desert.
Limited historical approach
Serenades, which Khadem co-wrote with historian Christine
Stevens, devotes much time and effort to creating historically
authentic sets and costumes. It includes some striking images
by veteran Australian cinematographer Russell Boyd (Picnic
at Hanging Rock, The Last Wave, Gallipoli and
The Year of Living Dangerously) and good performances by
Sinisa Copic, Nico Lathouris and Katayla Williams (as the young
Jila).
Unfortunately, much of the script's dialogue is stilted and
some of the characters feel rather artificial. This is most apparent
in the adult portrayals of Johann and Jila. Aden Young is stiff
and Alice Haines fails to deliver the emotional depth demanded
by her character. The couple's relationship is strangely asexual
and does not emotionally resonate.
Some of these problems are due to Khadem's relative inexperience
as a film director and scriptwriter. More serious weaknesses in
the film, however, are related to the filmmaker's tendency to
reduce everything to the religious or cultural identity of her
characters, who seem to exist and operate independently of real
social and economic life.
Khadem was born and raised as a member of the Bahai Faith in
Iran, where the fundamentalist Islamic regime persecuted her family.
She strongly opposes religious sectarianism and uses her film
to highlight some of the destructive features of the Christian,
Muslim and Aboriginal religions. At one point Jila shouts out
that she hates all gods.
But Khadem's story is preoccupied almost entirely with religion
to the exclusion of some of the central social and economic factors
shaping the attitudes of the film's protagonists.
Anti-Afghan Australia racism was rampant in the 1890s, yet
Serenades provides no indication of this atmosphere. The
cameleers, who were among the lowest paid workers in the country,
were subjected to constant racialist abuse, particularly from
the media and the emerging trade union bureaucracy. Anti-Afghan
Leagues were formed in some towns and physical attacks on Afghans
were frequent. If the cameleers retaliated or tried to defend
themselves they were severely punished by the police.
In Broken Hill, R. S. Ross, editor of the Barrier Truth,
viciously denounced the Afghan menace in the union-owned
newspaper, claiming they were a danger to the town's morals.
Ross declared that Chinese and Afghans were inferior alien
labourers and should not be allowed to enter Australia because
they were untrustworthy coloured mongrels that tend
always to sterility and extinction. Banning their entry,
he declared, was a fundamental instinct to protect the [white]
species.
The White Australia policy, which formed one of the main planks
of the Australian Labor Party when it was founded in the early
1890s, was incorporated in the infamous Immigration Restriction
Act, one of the first laws enacted by the Australian parliament
created in 1901. This policy, which remained in place until the
mid-1960s, effectively banned Asians entering Australia through
the imposition of European language dictation tests on all prospective
immigrants. Resident coloureds had to have government
permission to travel between statesa measure directly aimed
against Afghan cameleers who frequently crossed state borders
in the outback.
Although Serenades deals with the strict patriarchal
Muslim marriage code, it does not draw any connection between
the social and political isolation of the cameleers and how Islamic
leaders used these conditions and the prevailing racism to strengthen
their hold over the Afghans.
The film also inadequately deals with the situation confronting
local Aborigines on the mission. Pastor Hoffman, as head of Killalpaninna,
is portrayed as a dour and unyielding man but the mission itself
is rather benign. This simply does not ring true.
Aborigines, who were driven from their traditional lands by
settlers who murdered resisting natives, came to the missions
for physical protection and sustenance. While the missionaries
were not as brutal as the settlers, they shared the same belief
that Aborigines were little more than animals that had to be tamed
and civilised. The regime in these institutions was harsh and
psychologically destructive. Those failing to follow mission rules
were ostracised and thrown off the settlement.
Serenades concludes rather too easily. All its plot
strands neatly fall into place. Jila comes to terms with her own
history in a series of semi-mystical sequences. Shir Mohammed,
who has been uncompromisingly dogmatic throughout the story, not
only decides to allow his daughter her freedom but is prepared
to lie to the local mullah about it. The young couple seems to
have triumphed over the religious intolerance surrounding them.
This is rather simplistic.
Obviously Khadem cannot include everything in her portrayal
of this period but her ability to produce an artistically convincing
work is undermined because she treats the conflict between her
characters and their eventual resolution as purely questions of
religious identity. While there are no formulas for making insightful
historical drama, this sort of work needs to be informed by an
understanding of social and political dynamics.
See Also:
An interview with Mojgan Khadem
"Not just to entertain but to take the audience's breath
away intellectually"
[4 June 2001]
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