The Sudanese Gaze: Visual Memory in Post-Independence Sudan
“& black my only country.”
- “asmar”, Safia Elhillo
“The questions, though, that haunt us are: what role does the archive play in constructing knowledge about black subjectivity?...how do you tell a story that must be told and yet cannot be told?”
- Patricia J. Saunders, Fugitive Dreams of Diaspora: Conversations with Saidiya Hartman
العبيد هنا the niggers are here
our mothers debark a copper child on
each hip american future bluing
each life to match its new passport
& now & here the option to name the
asmar something new to pretend the word
in our new language is no longer black
despite bilad al sudan land of the
blacks as if our arabic will pale us
or blur the target disguise us as some
other other some more desirable
dusk as if the bullets will hear our sons’
sorghum inflections & bend to find some
black that holds up against language & sea
***
black that holds up against language & sea
black the only name assigned my body
that ever felt like mine black my hunted
kin my hunted blood & black my only
country & asmar & asmarani
& black that does not wait until called
a nigger or wait to be asked who
taught me to speak an arab’s arabic
The history of photography and film in Sudan is one that has long been subjected to repression and censorship at the hands of regimes that seek to control any and all images of the country currently in circulation. Sudan, home to some of Africa’s largest film and photography archives, gained independence from British rule in 1956. Post-independence, the narrative being pushed for by the state was framed as a ‘unifying’ measure, being that whether one was from the North, South, West, or East no longer mattered in a national sense and everyone was Sudanese from that point forward—but this often led to erasure of the lifestyles, beliefs, and identities of those marginalized by the increasingly rigid national identity. Thus, what it meant to be Sudanese from that point forward took on several different meanings, and the conversation about this newly-forming identity began to be explored, particularly from and by the youth, in the photography emerging from that time. Captured in the lenses of photographers and filmmakers like Gadalla Gubara, Fouad Hamza Tibin, Amin Rashid and Mohamed Yahia Issa, to name a few, are pictures of a newly emerging population dictating and forming an identity for themselves: Sudanese, in its collective in-betweenness, its nuances, its failures, its pain and its beauty. In the same breath, it must be acknowledged that these photos, beautiful and evocative of a certain nostalgia that feels most present in the absence of being in diaspora, are representative of only a certain fraction of Sudan’s population, centralized primarily in the country-capital that is Khartoum. Drawing upon the experience of someone who is Sudan-born, diaspora-raised, seeking to understand and form my own understanding of this shared identity, my positionality has made it is easy for me to look upon the tender images captured by these unsung photographers and feel the sort of warmth that can only emerge from a longing to know oneself in community with an estranged collective—acknowledging and assessing both the limitations and possibilities such a position affords is crucial to critically push the ongoing conversation of Sudanese identity formation forward.
What has made the preservation and circulation of these images possible are the efforts of photographers, filmmakers, researchers and archivists such as Sara Gadalla, Katharina Von Schroeder, Benjamin Chowkwan Ado, Awad Eldaw, and many countless other cultural caretakers. The archive, a highly discursive space, can mean many things. While the archive cannot “…be the depository of the entire history of a society, of all that has happened in that society…” it does offer a space in which “…we are presented with pieces of time to be assembled, fragments of life to be placed in order, one after the other, in an attempt to formulate a story that acquires its coherence through the ability to craft links between the beginning and the end” (Mbembe, 21). In a country like Sudan, where being able to freely express oneself and exist as a photographer subject to a dictatorial regime poses a problem, it becomes increasingly difficult to choose to remain a practicing artist, to exist in a constant state of repression within one’s own nation-state. Much like the relationship between the state and the photographer, the relationship between the state and the archive suffered. In its capacity to function as an institution of the imaginary, the archive itself maintains a complex relationship to the state, its state. While there is no state without its archives, the very existence of the archive constitutes a constant threat to the state. [1]
In turn, Sudan’s national archives face a familiar and deeply troubled set of issues: severe neglect, poor conditions, and an overwhelming lack of support, funding, or resources from the government to which they belong, issues explored in depth by Suhaib Gasmelbari in his illuminating documentary short “Sudan’s Forgotten Films” (2017). Sudan’s national film and photography archive alone, among the largest in Africa, is home to over 13,000 films and stills. This archive, formerly managed by two elderly archivists and among the remaining experts or guardians of the archive—Benjamin Ado and Awad Aldaw—is home to footage and images of many of Sudan’s pivotal moments: Sudan’s official independence day, Nelson Mandela’s visit to the Sudan, snapshots of a period in Sudanese history when it was amongst the foremost developed nations with free access to healthcare and education, daily flights between Europe and the Americas, and regular but exponentially important portraits of Sudanese people across the nation living their lives as freely as they do now. However, it is in critical danger following years of damaging and poor conditions. Much to the frustration and disappointment of Ado and Aldaw, who dedicated their lives to preserving these artifacts for future generations of Sudanese people, there has been a resounding lack of official support from Sudan’s current administration.[2] Instead, outside institutions—many of whom are European, such as the University of Bergen (financed by the Norwegian embassy)—have taken on the ongoing project of digitising what remains salvageable of the archival materials. Private archives and studios like ELNOUR and Studio Gad (managed and run by Sara Gadalla with assistance from Katharina Von Schroeder) have embarked on the same mission, working to digitise and make available the private archives of prominent yet largely unknown or unacknowledged Sudanese photographers providing as much credit as possible to the photographers and filmmakers for their beautiful and necessary work.
The Sudan of today is a country beyond a country, one of exploded borders, whose cultural production, creative lineage, and collective cultural identity is being defined in real time by its latest generation of artists and innovators. There is Ahmed Abushakeema, a freelance photographer living in Khartoum, who began a project in which he planned to capture “1000 Portraits From Sudan”. Spurred by the lack of documentation of Sudan’s large and wide range of ethnic and phenotypic diversity, Abushakeema’s ultimate goal of putting on display the many faces of Sudan is in hopes that one’s story, one’s name, is irrelevant so long as they are a part of Sudan in whatever capacity that takes shape. There is self-taught producer and audio painter Sammany Hajo, who in 2017 released his paramount album Briefcase, a collection of beats that sample and fuse the Sudanese Haqeeba songs. Al Haqeeba is a style of music that originated in the 1920s and was influenced by the Sudanese ‘madeeh’ (a sufi practice of praising the Prophet Muhammad [pbuh]). Drawing upon his own experiences as a Sudanese artist raised in diaspora and having grown up listening to aghani al Haqeeba, Hajo bridges past and present to develop an ethereal soundscape that can uniquely be identified to the modern moment. Platforms like that of ElMastaba TV, founded by filmmaker and content creator Idreesy Koum, or sn3sdn صنع في السودان (made in Sudan), founded by brand architects, designers, and artists Abdallah Abbas and Ahmed Shareef, offer examples of what embracing and uplifting creative pursuits by and for Sudanese people can look like. Institutions like MOJO Gallery and the Sudan Film Factory, two major proponents of the arts and cinema based in Khartoum, offer concrete models of what creating from and being in service of a Sudanese center can manifest in: the circulation and acquisition of Sudanese art and film, through channels that respect and honor the formerly undervalued cultural productions of Sudanese artists, artisans and filmmakers. The common ground these modern institutions and creators stand upon is one of courage and regenerative hope. The Sudanese, amongst many things, are purveyors of hope, possessing a seemingly illogical courage. After the release of his critically acclaimed documentary film, “Talking About Trees”, in an interview on this same courage and the resilience of the four filmmakers he tenderly documents, Suhaib Gasmelbari notes: “This courage comes after a lot of fear. When the fear grows very high and you live in a constant state of it, suddenly there is an illogical courage that invades you.”
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Mbembe, Achille. “The Power of the Archive and Its Limits.” Refiguring the Archive. Comp. Carolyn Hamilton. N.p.: Springer, 2002. 19–27. Print. ↩
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At the time of this writing, Sudan was formerly under the repressive regime of Omar Al-Bashir’s administration. ↩
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Locale. “This Will Have Been: Archives of the Past, Present, and Future.” Localesd.com, 2019, www.localesd.com/project/will-have-been. ↩
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May 2020. Vol nº1