Voice of America |
Two New Films Examine
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New York 14 April 2005 |
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War, it has often
been said, is hell. Less often noted are the ways that that hell
can continue for soldiers and civilians long after the guns of
war have been silenced. A new documentary film,
Voices in Wartime's opening sequence shows a horrific montage of battle scenes culled from the world's many wars. The uniforms on the soldiers and the rationale for sending them into battle differs from war to war, but the looks of fear and grief on their young faces are uncannily similar.
The producer says the film raises two crucial questions: how do we heal the trauma of war, and how do we heal the societies and the individuals who are damaged by war in order to diminish the chances of war's reoccurring? "I think we sometimes forget that war is not a video game," says Mr. Himes. "War involves the terrible destruction of human life and shattered dreams. How do we bring that home to people in a way that people understand?" To judge by the film, the answer seems to be through simple truthful storytelling. Unlike traditional documentaries, there is no outside narrator in Voices in Wartime. It consists mostly of personal accounts and poetry about the horrors of war spanning the millennia from ancient Greece up to the present. Mr. Himes says he hopes soldiers and veterans and others affected by war can find in those narratives a path to healing. "If you are able to relive the story of what happened to you," he says, "and say 'let me tell you what happened. I was at this place. Here is what happened to me. Here is how I felt about it,' then suddenly you are enabled to move through and past the trauma. You don't have to just flick that switch of anger and resentment and hyper-vigilance."
He lifts
his head just a little, but just enough, That sort of battlefield carnage can be difficult for non-combatants to comprehend, and returning veterans often feel misunderstood. But the effects of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder are keenly perceived in the community. That is why a short companion film, Beyond Wartime, is being shown in living rooms, community centers and veterans halls nationally to promote awareness, dialog and empathy. Eric G. Glaude, a readjustment counselor at the Harlem Vet Center in New York City, was wounded in the Korean War. He supports the film's message. "The community I am from could benefit from knowing that there are people other than themselves that have really been affected by war," he says. "Not only hurt -- but damaged! They will be reminded of the horrors and introduced to the horrors -- the smell of fear, the smell of death. When it gets in your nose, you can never get rid of it." Mr. Glaude adds that people won't know that without films like Voices in Wartime and Beyond Wartime.
"He was a war hero and the rest of his life he suffered from being a war hero," she says. "He drank a lot. He fought a lot. He was unable to hold down a job, and the marriage ended when I was quite young. He died at the age of 53 walking home from a tavern and he was found in a snowdrift the following day."
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