Emerging filmmakers from across the world, who present stories from the Middle East, say creative storytelling helps put the spotlight on the concerns here and gain a deeper global understanding. Several new voices in cinema from the emerging talents were screened at the 6th Ajyal Film Festival, the annual cinema event hosted by the Doha Film Institute (DFI) at Katara – the Cultural Village.
Marco Proserpio, who directed The Man Who Stole Banksy (UK, Italy, Qatar/2018), based on the politically divisive works painted by anonymous street artists and activist Banksy in Palestine, said that Banksy only served as an excuse to gain attention and to talk about the bigger issues in the region.
“I came across the idea while travelling between Jerusalem and Bethlehem,” said Proserpio, adding that for him, the theme looked like a “good way to talk about Palestine from a different angle and to picture Palestinians as human beings and not victims.” 
“I admire Banksy for his actions than his artworks, for example, his actions in Palestine over 10 years,” he added.
Proserpio said they sent a copy of the film to Banksy when they finished it “but did not try to reach out during the process of making the film as I was not interested in his identity.”
Made over a period of six years, with support from DFI, the film won a Best Screenplay Award at the Cannes Film Festival 2018. “Making this film was difficult because the story was not controlled by me or by my team. In many ways, we were part of the real life, and we had to wait to see what the next step would be,” Proserpio noted.
He said the support of DFI to the film was valuable, especially during the phase of lending narrative voice to it. 
Director Muslim Habib, whose film As My Father Was (Iraq/2018), screening in the ‘Courage’ programme of Ajyal said, cinema makes it possible for him to shed light on a very important issue in Iraq relating to children without citizenship.
The film is a take on a 12-year-old boy who struggles to find a school due to his ethnic background and disability. 
“The events in Iraq have negatively affected more than 536,000 children and I think the main achievement of the film is in successfully highlighting the issue, and in promoting awareness on the need for enrolling children in school after being deprived of their fundamental right to education,” he said.
Youssef al-Bagshi, director of the short film Transformation (Kuwait/2017), which screened in the Resilience programme at Ajyal, said movies play a key role in revealing and reflecting the marginalised aspects of specific issues.
The film is about a young disabled man who lives with his mother and how he struggles to overcome his limitations.