'Letters from Baghdad' Doc Reveals the Desert Adventures of Gertrude Bell

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

'Letters from Baghdad' Doc Reveals the Desert Adventures of Gertrude Bell Review 'Letters from Baghdad' doc reveals the desert adventures of Gertrude Bell British adventurer Gertrude Bell, from the documentary "Letters From Baghdad." (Gertrude Bell Archive, Newcastle University) By Jeffrey Fleishman JUNE 8, 2017, 2:10 PM he roamed across deserts, loading camels with evening gowns and cutlery, slipping through ancient ruins like a spy and finding herself the lone woman at the center of a struggle that defined the borders and politics of a Middle East that has refused to be tamed by Western S powers. Gertrude Bell was heroine, archaeologist, feminist and map-maker. She spoke Persian and Arabic, was the confidant of a king and was famously unlucky in love. The daughter of a British industrialist, her wanderings through Syria and Iraq in the early 1900s were as vital to deciphering the region as those of her more celebrated male counterpart T.E. Lawrence, better known as Lawrence of Arabia. A new film, “Letters from Baghdad,” explores the complexities of a character who was at once graceful and arrogant, erudite and earthen. The documentary is based on letters and communiqués — Tilda Swinton is the voice of Bell — that follow her from the aristocracy and drizzle of Yorkshire, England, to the scoured, arid expanses of tribesmen, Bedouins and sheikhs. Bell called the Middle East “my second native country.” Insights from her years of travel helped shape the boundaries of Iraq after World War I and the fall of the Ottoman Empire. That Iraq, with its uneasy balance of Kurds, Sunnis and Shiites, has confounded the West for decades, including two American-led wars, and the rise of ISIS, which today threatens stability from Cairo to Damascus to Dubai. Bell was prophetic on the conflicting allegiances and dangers of Western intervention in lands that were rooted in clan customs and knew little of democracy. “We don’t know exactly what we intend to be in this country. We rushed into this business with our usual disregard for a comprehensive politics scheme,” she said of the British occupation of Iraq in the early 1920s. “Can you persuade people to take your side when you’re not sure if in the end whether you’ll be there to take theirs?” http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/la-et-mn-letters-baghdad-review-20170608-story.html 1/2 Such sentiments have echoed through hundreds of thousands of deaths and trillions of dollars in damage, weapons and other costs since the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003. But “Letters from Baghdad” takes us on a journey before all that. Directed by Zeva Oelbaum and Sabine Krayenbuhl the film elegantly unfolds as if someone had peeked inside a steerage trunk and thumbed through the brittle pages of scrapbooks showing sailboats on the Euphrates and hieroglyphics in the moonlight. “I have cut the thread,” Bell wrote as she vanished once again into the desert. “You will find me a savage for I’ve seen and heard strange things and they color the mind.” The only woman diplomat at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, Bell was a curiosity in a political world dominated by men. The Ottoman Empire marked her as a spy; some of her British colleagues viewed her with suspicion and grudging admiration. Lawrence said of her: “A wonderful person, not very much like a woman, you know. … She was born too gifted perhaps.” A British newspaper headline said Bell “Explored in the Middle East ‘Like a Man.’” She looks out from black-and-white photographs and film footage as privileged and restless; sharp nose, thin lips, pearls and cloche hats. She once hired 17 camels and traveled 1,500 miles. Her love life was just as arduous. A fiancé in Tehran died of illness and a married lieutenant colonel she adored was killed in the battle of Gallipoli. And eventually, even in the land she was most intimate with, her influence waned among onetime friend King Faisal and officials dispatched by the British foreign office. “Letters from Baghdad” reaffirms Bell’s legacy as pivotal in the West’s understanding of the Middle East. It is a vivid, if sober, counterbalance to Werner Herzog’s poorly reviewed “Queen of the Desert,” starring Nicole Kidman as Bell. In an age of a rebooted “Wonder Woman,” Bell is the real thing, intrepid, fierce and smart. A writer and archaeologist, respected by sheikhs, Bell helped found the National Museum of Iraq (ransacked and looted during the war in 2003). She struggled with “black depression” and reportedly died of an overdose of sleeping pills in 1926, at the age of 57. She left behind the contours of a new nation and at least, as one friend put it, “25 pairs of expensive shoes.” ------------- ‘Letters from Baghdad’ Not rated Running time: 1 hour, 35 minutes Playing: Laemmle Monica Film Center, Santa Monica Academy­Award­winning “Lawrence of Arabia” editor Anne V. Coates will join filmmakers Zeva Oelbaum and Sabine Krayenbuhl for the Q&A at the Friday, June 9, 7:30 p.m. screening. See the most­read stories this hour » Twitter: @JeffreyLAT [email protected] Copyright © 2018, Los Angeles Times This article is related to: Middle East, Iraq http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/la-et-mn-letters-baghdad-review-20170608-story.html 2/2.
Recommended publications
  • ORIGINS of the PALESTINE MANDATE by Adam Garfinkle
    NOVEMBER 2014 ORIGINS OF THE PALESTINE MANDATE By Adam Garfinkle Adam Garfinkle, Editor of The American Interest Magazine, served as the principal speechwriter to Secretary of State Colin Powell. He has also been editor of The National Interest and has taught at Johns Hopkins University’s School for Advanced International Studies (SAIS), the University of Pennsylvania, Haverford College and other institutions of higher learning. An alumnus of FPRI, he currently serves on FPRI’s Board of Advisors. This essay is based on a lecture he delivered to FPRI’s Butcher History Institute on “Teaching about Israel and Palestine,” October 25-26, 2014. A link to the the videofiles of each lecture can be found here: http://www.fpri.org/events/2014/10/teaching-about- israel-and-palestine Like everything else historical, the Palestine Mandate has a history with a chronological beginning, a middle, and, in this case, an end. From a strictly legal point of view, that beginning was September 29, 1923, and the end was midnight, May 14, 1948, putting the middle expanse at just short of 25 years. But also like everything else historical, it is no simple matter to determine either how far back in the historical tapestry to go in search of origins, or how far to lean history into its consequences up to and speculatively beyond the present time. These decisions depend ultimately on the purposes of an historical inquiry and, whatever historical investigators may say, all such inquiries do have purposes, whether recognized, admitted, and articulated or not. A.J.P. Taylor’s famous insistence that historical analysis has no purpose other than enlightened storytelling, rendering the entire enterprise much closer to literature than to social science, is interesting precisely because it is such an outlier perspective among professional historians.
    [Show full text]
  • Volume Ix • Part 1 • Spring 1947
    VOLUME IX • PART 1 • SPRING 1947 CONTENTS EXCAVATIONS AT BRAK AND CHAGAR BAZAR, by M. E. L. MALLOWAN. INTRODUCTION i PART I: BRAK AND CHAGAR BAZAR: THEIR CONTRI­ BUTION TO ARCHAEOLOGY I0 PART II: BUILDINGS AND STRATIFICATION SECTION 1—BRAK 48 SECTION 2—CHAGAR BAZAR 81 PUBLISHED BY THE BRITISH SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY IN IRAQ (GERTRUDE BELL MEMORIAL), 20 Wilton Street, London, S.W.i. Price 18J. net. Annual Subscription £i n o. IRAQ is published by the British School of Archaeology in Iraq (Gertrude Bell Memorial). It is devoted to studies of the history, art, archaeology, religion, and social life of Iraq, and to a lesser degree of the neighbouring coiintries (Iran, Armenia, Anatolia, Syria, and Arabia), from the earliest times down to about A.D. 1700. Texts concerning these subjects, with translations and comments, will be considered; exclusively philological articles will not be accepted. ONTRIBUTORS are requested to submit for illustration only clear prints of Cphotographs or strong outline drawings. For oriental languages, trans­ literation into Roman script on the approved system should be employed, as laid down in the * Notice to Contributors/ which will be sent on application. Articles should be sent to the Editor of c Iraq/ c. j. GADD, BRITISH MUSEUM, W.C.I. IKAQ appears twice yearly, in the Spring and Autumn. Single ^umbers may be purchased from the agents Bernard Quaritch, 11 Grafton Street, London, W.i, Luzac & Co., 46 Great Russell Street, London, W.G.i, Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., 43 Great Russell Street, London, W.C.i, and Harrison and Sons, Ltd., 44-47 St.
    [Show full text]
  • Sykes Picot Treaty Map
    Sykes Picot Treaty Map pigeonholedRollin remains her pansophical tenaculum afterstruttingly, Jean oscillatingbut state Sylvan licitly or tin-plate escribes bewitchingly any hardhacks. or circumstances Unsucceeded grimily. Odell winter cubically. Sometimes detached Filipe At the west bank is missing or civil and picot treaty between maps popped up Syria relations for the International Crisis Group; such as legal fellow made the Institute of first World Affairs, writing on Syria. These geographic twilight zones, where one country ends and the next begins, can be seen in the human networks and linkages among Jordan, Iraq and Saudi Arabia, or Syria and Lebanon. This map with him leave mosul under the cynical imperial master, picot map of its determination to the british had expected to recognize the opposition groups in may be. The map of and in thetwentieth century than it ensured palestine will come out sykes picot treaty map of omar then premiums might have sent to survive in? We detect a treaty of sykes told me when he said to draw borders, sykes picot treaty map of iraq, more sensitive to be predominant, causing grief ever. The agreement was ratified and legalised with a proper mandate from the League of Nations at the San Remo Conference. The ottomans in which he has been causing grief ever been carved virtually the sykes picot treaty map does the leaders of the following rules were simply foreign fighters were ready to land. So reserved their impact of sykes picot was a bug for? This is an obvious lesson, but it is regularly ignored. Assad died during second is one reached arab areas of reprisals, and subsequently in town of sykes picot treaty map.
    [Show full text]
  • What Is the Point About Sykes–Picot?
    Global Affairs ISSN: 2334-0460 (Print) 2334-0479 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rgaf20 What is the point about Sykes–Picot? Pinar Bilgin To cite this article: Pinar Bilgin (2016): What is the point about Sykes–Picot?, Global Affairs, DOI: 10.1080/23340460.2016.1236518 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23340460.2016.1236518 Published online: 11 Oct 2016. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 36 View related articles View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=rgaf20 Download by: [Bilkent University], [Pinar Bilgin] Date: 19 October 2016, At: 23:28 Global Affairs, 2016 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23340460.2016.1236518 What is the point about Sykes–Picot? Pinar Bilgin* Department of International Relations, Department of Political Science and Public Administration, Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey (Received 4 August 2016; accepted 12 September 2016) The Sykes–Picot Agreement (1916) became (in)famous once again following a tweet announcing a propaganda video by the group that call themselves the Islamic State of Iraq and al Sham (ISIS) declaring “the end of Sykes–Picot”. In this essay I suggest that the point about Sykes–Picot is not about the “artificiality” of borders in the Middle East (for all borders are artificial in different ways) or the way in which they were drawn (for almost all borders were agreed on by a few men, and seldom women, behind closed doors) but (also) that it was shaped by a discursive economy that allowed for the International Society to decide the fate of those that were deemed as not-yet capable of governing themselves.
    [Show full text]
  • ACOR Newsletter Vol. 32.2
    VOLUME 32.2 | March 2021 for July–December 2020 A Century of Preserving Jordanian Heritage Jehad Haron, Noreen Doyle, and Pearce Paul Creasman In 2021, the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan celebrates its centennial. In honor of these first hundred years, ACOR takes a moment to look back at some of the critical legislative roots that have made preserving Jordan’s cultural heritage possible. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when Jordan was part of the Ottoman Empire’s frontiers, political and social movements were developing in the region to demand greater independence. The outbreak of the World War I in 1914, followed On page 1: George Horsfield, Lankester Harding, Awni Dajani, Façade of the Nabatean royal funerary monument known today as the Treasury (al-Khazneh) in Petra. Scaffolding surrounds a column that was restored by the Abdel-Karim Al-Gharaybeh, and others, scientific Department of Antiquities during work undertaken at the site in the late 1950s documentation and reports began to play major roles and early 1960s. (Courtesy of the J. Haron collection.) in recovering, preserving, and understanding this heritage. Publication of the first volume of theAnnual two years later by the Great Arab Revolt, ultimately of the Department of Antiquities in 1951 reflected the forced the empire to withdraw. In the aftermath of scientific progress at that time. The decision, in 1976, these events, in 1921 the modern Jordanian state to prohibit the trading of antiquities has helped to emerged with new geographical borders and its first keep many archaeological objects within Jordan and to emir, Abdullah bin Al Hussein.
    [Show full text]
  • GERTRUDE BELL AS a LITERARY ARTIST By
    GERTRUDE BELL AS A LITERARY ARTIST by Margaret E. Fry A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research McGill University In Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Arts Aprll 23, 1942 TABLE OF CONI'E:N"TS CFLA..PTER PAGE I TI:rTRODUCTION • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 II GERTRUDE BELL AS A DESCRIPTIVE ARTIST • 9 Flovqers • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 10 Trees • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 22 Food and Hospitality •• • • • • • • • 28 Animals • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 36 \'leather Conditions • • • • • • • • • • 40 Roads • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 42 Ancient Ruins • • • • • • • • • • • • 43 People • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 45 r\Tiscellaneous Descriptions • • • • • • 51 Evaluation • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 53 III GERTRUDE BELL AS A STORY TELLER • • • • 56 Travel Books • • • • • • • • • • • • 56 Poetry- • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 58 Archaeology • • • • • • • • • • • • • 61 D1 GERTRUDE BELL ...W .ll LETTER VJRITER • • • • 63 I One-quarter century- (1874-1899) • • • 65 1900-1914 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 93 Empire Builder • • • • • • • • • • • • 102 Comparison • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 111 CONCLUSION V • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 116 BIBLIOGRAPHY • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 118 CHA.PTER I INTRODUCTION Gertrude Margaret Lovnhian Bell, historian, traveller, archaeologist, author, and king-maker, lives today in the memory of the people of Iraq vrr1o are fight­ ing to preserve that independence as a nation which she helped them to achieve. Especially to the average American,
    [Show full text]
  • The Extraordinary Gertrude Bell, Tyne Bridge Publishing (Opens a Pdf File): Click Here
    The Extraordinary Gertrude Bell Classroom actvities KS3-KS4 It's a shocking affair how the East has wound itself round my heart till I don't know which is me and which is it. I never lose the sense of it. I'm acutely conscious always of its charm and grace which do not seem to wear thin with familiarity. I'm more a citizen of Baghdad than many a Baghdadi born, and I'll wager that no Baghdadi cares more, or half so much, for the beauty of the river or the palm gardens, or clings more closely to the rights of citizenship which I have acquired (Gertrude Bell, Letters) 1 WHAT YOU WILL FIND IN THIS TEACHING PACK Classroom Art and Key Stage Literacy History Geography Citizenship Page Activity design 1 3-4 3 2 3-4 5 3 3-4 7 4 3-4 9 5 3-4 11 6 3-4 13 2 CLASSROOM ACTIVITY 1 – KS3-4 GERTRUDE BELL AND THE ISLAMIC WORLD 1 The study of the Middle East in the United Kingdom has a long history, dating back to the first chairs in Arabic, established at Cambridge and Oxford in the Seventeen century. Gertrude Bell developed a truly fascination for the Middle East: she learned Arabic and produced a critically acclaimed translation of the 14th century Persian poet Hafez (Poems from the Divan of Hafiz). Hafez's passionate and sensual lyrics were much admired by poets such as Byron and Tennyson and are very popular in today’s Iran. The fascination of Gertrude Bell for Middle Eastern art and architecture lasted for all her life and is documented in all her works.
    [Show full text]
  • Artificial Nations?The Sykes-Picot and the Islamic State's Narratives in A
    Diacronie Studi di Storia Contemporanea www.diacronie.it N. 25 | 1|2016 “Se creare è definire” 3/ Artificial nations? The Sykes-Picot and the Islamic State’s narratives in a historical perspective* Lorenzo KAMEL * In the last few years a growing number of academic works have analyzed the past and the present of the Eastern Mediterranean region arguing that Western powers «created artificial nations» and that most of the modern states in the area are deprived of peculiar historical legacies. The narrative of the Islamic State (IS) that is now trying to erase the «Sykes-Picot order» – reproduced in Western media and discourse – is largely based on similar assumptions. This article challenges these arguments and contends that, if not considered in a critical way, the ‘process of simplification’ experienced by the region between the last decades of the nineteenth and the first decades of the twentieth centuries can itself trigger simplificative assumptions. The cultural and political evolution of many of the countries in the region shows a much more complex historical development than what the Sykes-Picot (and the related IS) narrative would suggest: most of the states in the region are not simply «artificial creations» and old maps should not be used, once again, to cover a complex local reality. Artificial nations? The Sykes-Picot and the Islamic State’s narratives in a historical perspective «Haughty as a Persian, tender as a Syrian / elegant as an Iraqi, eloquent as a Hijazi»1. Twelfth-century Syrian poet Ibn Munir al-Tarabulsi writing about his male beloved. «Before nationalist doctrines were imported from Europe, “patriotic” identities had already taken shape in many parts of the world»2.
    [Show full text]
  • Mark Sykes, the British Arabists and the Enduring Consequences of the Sykes-Picot Agreement Nicholas Comaratta
    Historical Perspectives: Santa Clara University Undergraduate Journal of History, Series II Volume 20 Article 10 2015 Mark Sykes, the British Arabists and the Enduring Consequences of the Sykes-Picot Agreement Nicholas Comaratta Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarcommons.scu.edu/historical-perspectives Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Comaratta, Nicholas (2015) "Mark Sykes, the British Arabists and the Enduring Consequences of the Sykes-Picot Agreement," Historical Perspectives: Santa Clara University Undergraduate Journal of History, Series II: Vol. 20 , Article 10. Available at: http://scholarcommons.scu.edu/historical-perspectives/vol20/iss1/10 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Historical Perspectives: Santa Clara University Undergraduate Journal of History, Series II by an authorized editor of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Comaratta: Mark Sykes, the British Arabists Sykes-Picot Agreement 97 98 Historical Perspectives September 2015 Mark Sykes, The British Arabists and for nearly four hundred years) between the three nations; Britain would maintain control over modern the Enduring Consequences of the day Iraq, and France the region of modern day Syria Sykes-Picot Agreement and Lebanon. While Russia was originally partitioned a small section of land north of Iraq, their zone was Nicholas Comaratta delegitimized by the collapse of their Imperial state and the rise of the Bolsheviks in 1917. Nevertheless, the boundaries drawn in the agreement would eventually Introduction be used in the post-war formation of the mandate The ongoing actions of the Islamic State (ISIS) in system in the Middle East under the League of Na- 3 Syria and Iraq are motivated by both religious and tions.
    [Show full text]
  • Countherhistory December 2013 Barbara Joan Zeitz Bell of Arabia
    CountHerhistory December 2013 Barbara Joan Zeitz Bell of Arabia: The epic 1962 Hollywood film titled Lawrence of Arabia is virtually as immortal as are the real life adventures and accomplishments of Thomas Edward Lawrence. But his legacy and its true story is often debated. Jeremy Wilson, biographer of T. E. Lawrence, cites Lawrence’s, Seven Pillars as: “...extremely accurate historically, …What it isn't, is complete... true in essence…perhaps wrong on a few details." Details, perhaps of a woman who rode camels in Arabia? NPR’s Jackie Lyden says of the man who created his own myth, “... it may be that the best way to regard T. E. Lawrence is to consider what would have happened in the Middle East without him.” Or, may it be posited, without her? Gertrude Bell (1868-1926) was born into a very wealthy Victorian era British family, groomed from infancy to become a proper woman, meaning she would marry and serve as a wife and mother. But Gertrude had zeal for intellectual pursuits and a hunger for learning. She was an unrelenting reader who escaped through her books. Despite that only boys were sent away for formal schooling, a wise but radical parental decision, allowed Gertrude to attend Queen’s College, a girls’ school in London where she excelled in her studies. If she found a class too easy, she requested transfer to an advanced class. Beyond her years at sixteen, she found other privileged young girls focused on domesticity to be uninteresting. She missed intellectual exchanges with her father, brother, and male cousins.
    [Show full text]
  • Orientalism and Three British Dames: De-Essentialization of the Other In
    Orientalism and Three British Dames: De-essentialization of the Other in the Work of Gertrude Bell, Freya Stark, and E.S. Drower A Thesis Submitted to The Faculty of the School of Communication In Candidacy for the Degree of Master of Arts in English By Lynn Massie Sawyer April 2012 Sawyer 2 Liberty University School of Communication Master of Arts in English Dr. Emily Heady, Thesis Chair Date Dr. Brenda Ayres, First Reader Date Dr. Yaw Adu-Gyamfi, Second Reader Date Sawyer 3 Abstract Although postcolonial criticism has run its course for thirty years, a fresh look at Edward Said’s Orientalism offers insight into how Orientalism functions in the writings of three British dames. Gertrude Bell in The Desert and the Sown, Freya Stark in The Southern Gates of Arabia, and E.S. Drower in The Mandaeans of Iraq and Iran, however, challenge Said’s theory. Their writing raises questions about how gender alters the discourse about the Other, and whether Said essentializes the Occident. Bell, Stark, and Drower serve as case studies in which to analyze the politically and rhetorically complex interactions between the West and the East at the end of the Colonial period. Over time, these women moved from approaching the Other with superior attitudes and a focus on otherness to developing a sympathetic understanding and greater appreciation of the similarities between the West and the East. Key Words: Said, Bell, Stark, Drower, Orientalism, Other, Postcolonialism Sawyer 4 Acknowledgements First of all, I would like to share my appreciation for the following people who helped me in this thesis process.
    [Show full text]
  • Was Britain Really Committed to Independence for Its Middle East Mandates, Or Was the Mandate System Just Another Form of Empire Building?
    Was Britain really committed to independence for its Middle East Mandates, or was the Mandate System just another form of empire building? A resource for Key Stage 4 Key words: Migration; Empire; Business; Identity; Liberty; Survival; Religion; Government; Communications; Economy; Ideas; Role of individuals in encouraging / inhibiting change Following the First World War (1914-1918) the League of Nations was created, in January 1920, as a result of the Paris Peace Conference. An international organisation whose primary goal was to maintain world peace, the League’s ambition was weakened by the fact that the United States never joined the organisation, and that Germany, for its role in WWI, was not allowed to become a member. One of the League’s most far-reaching, and controversial, decisions was to create the Mandate System. Under the Mandate System, the legal control over certain territories was transferred from a defeated power to a victorious one. In the case of the Middle East, the defeated power was the Ottoman Empire, which ceased to exist as a result of the war: the victorious powers that were granted Mandate status over former Ottoman lands were Britain and France. Two of the most important clauses of the Mandate System were that i) the mandatory powers (i.e. Britain and France) did not have the right to annex, or make these territories their own, and ii) mandate powers had a “sacred trust of civilisation” to develop the territory for the benefit of its native people. This meant that the mandated territories could not, or should not, simply become part of the British or French empires, and that those territories must also be granted independence.
    [Show full text]