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Tuesday, February 09, 2010 | 23 Safar 1431  


  Film "Warring Factions"  
A breakdancing bridge to Iran
Warring Factions a new documentary film by Justin Mashouf, explores an unusual link between American and modern Iranian culture - the underground b-boy scene. In it, we see a reminder of the human connection that is often lost in politics.

Warring Factions, a new feature documentary by Justin Mashouf, is one of those rare films where the filmmaker puts himself as the subject. In the film, Mashouf is an Iranian-American breakdancer who aims to bridge the cultural divide between America and Iran with his b-boying. In the midst of ever-present tensions between the United States and Iran, Warring Factions comes at exactly the right time.

The film starts in Tuscon, Arizona, where Mashouf is a student, and follows his daily life – a life which includes both Quran classes and regular practices and competitions with his b-boy crew. Mashouf takes a few moments in the film to explore how Americans perceive Iran and America's war on terror, by interviewing folks at an air show - the results are typical and can be blamed on the influences of Fox News and others. Staunch Republicans defame Iran while young boys wish to grow up to be soldiers. In this age of Obama, these scenes in the film are a good reminder of what the past eight years under the Bush Administration have been like, and how much the Bush doctrine shaped the country's attitude towards foreign countries. Mashouf doesn't let us forget.

He then heads over to Iran to visit family and to check out the country's b-boy scene. Mashouf said in an interview: "I heard about b-boying in Iran from seeing a clip I found on an international breaking website in 2007. I emailed Hossein "Battle" and asked him about the scene in Iran and we planned to meet."

In the film Mashouf discovers that Iran has hundreds of b-boys, who are highly skilled. This is one of the highlights of the film that again makes the viewer reflect on the current political climate - Americans have been told many times that Iranians hate America, yet here is a film that shows Iranians appreciating American culture, such as b-boying, and are making it into their own underground movement.

I asked Mashouf what it was like to be in Iran, coming from America: "I wouldn't say that I felt out of place in Iran but being an American in Iran is like being a movie star in a small town, everyone wants to know your story. Additionally, when people find out that you practice Islam, they realize there is a lot more to the US than what they thought."

The cultural exchange goes both ways, with Mashouf taking classes in Varzesh Bastani, a sort of Iranian martial arts sport, that definitely does not look easy to learn. Through observational techniques and interviews with Mashouf's teachers, Warring Factions also operates well as an educational film on Iranian culture and history.

The viewer can see Mashouf's understanding and appreciation of his Iranian heritage throughout the film. "When making the film I knew that b-boying and Varzesh Bastani would be two major elements that unite the two halves of my identity."

After his travels, Varzesh Bastani classes, and numerous battles with Iranian b-boys, Mashouf heads home but receives an unpleasant surprise as soon as he steps off the plane. Homeland Security confiscates all of his footage and Mashouf is questioned for nearly five hours. Without giving too much away, Mashouf's incident with Homeland Security was a very ironic, sad, and poignant event in his story.

Warring Factions will be screening next at the Noor Film Festival, on May 2nd in Los Angeles. Mashouf has certainly made a very intriguing and thoughtful film that will educate you about either b-boying, Iranian culture and history, Iranian b-boys, Homeland Security, or all simultaneously.

Hena Ashraf is a filmmaker and a fierce advocate for the making and use of independent media. She can be reached at hena @ a2palestinefilmfest.org.


1 COMMENT ON THIS ARTICLE



As the Jewish Lobby in the US and some other western countries, through their agents in the government and Jewish-owned mass media – has successfully created the perception that a war with the Islamic regime in Tehran is unavoidable for the survival of US imperialism, Israel and the western civilization – the American-born Iranian breakdancer and film maker Justin Mashouf 24 – in his first full length documentary titled Warring Factions, in which he explores the common cultural grounds between the US and it Zionist-perceived enemy Islamic Iran.

The documentary not only expresses Justin’s personal experience in Islamic Iran but also how he was detained and his video footage was confiscated on suspicion of ‘terrorism’ by the pro-Israel mafia in the US Homeland Security Department. It’s headed by a Zionist Jew, Joseph Lieberman and Janet Napolitano, a reputed Zionist and lesbian. The Director of Homeland Security under Bush was Michael Chertoff, a Zionist Jew with US-Israel dual nationality. Sami Jamil Jadallah in his article Should the United States Worry about \”Zionists\” as Fifth Column? Yes explains how the 98% US population has been enslaved by 2% of its Jewish population.

The film Warring Factions was screened at the Noor Film Festival on May3, 2009. The organization is dedicated to bringing Americans and Iranians together, independent of religious and political ideology, through the medium of cinema.

http://rehmat1.wordpress.com/2009/05/23/warring-factions-an-anti-war-film/


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Zahed will be a panelist at Divan 2.0, a debate on the future of the Muslim internet sponsored by the Radical Middle Way at the London School of Economics in London, England, May 22, 2009.

Once Were Radicals (published by Allen and Unwin), the first book by Associate Editor Irfan Yusuf, is released in Australia, May 4, 2009.

Shahed and Wajahat will be speaking at the 3rd Annual Leadership Summit presented by the Council for the Advancement of Muslim Professionals in Princeton, NJ, May 2, 2009.

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O’s Fall Reading Guide - Children of Dust - "Ali Eteraz's memoir, Children of Dust, describes this ardent young Muslim's picaresque journey from a brutal Pakistani madrassa (oddly reminiscent of a British boys' school) to America's Bible Belt ("Allahbama," in his devout but increasingly modern eyes), where he braved the sexual fantasyland of AOL and zealously warded off temptation in miniskirts... his adventures are a heavenly read." (October 14, 2009)

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