An Award from the County of San
Diego Cable and Telecommunications Review Commission.
DOCUMENTARY FILM
ABOUT IRAQI IMMIGRANTS AND REFUGEES
SET TO PREMIERE IN
CALIFORNIA
(Filmed in El
Cajon, California)



“STORIES FROM BAGHDAD U.S.A.”
Contact: Kevin King (619) 708-9204,
kingkut@mail.com
EPK available:
www.baghdadusa.com
(under “Press”)
San Diego, CA – “Stories form Baghdad
U.S.A.,” a documentary from filmmakers Kevin King and Alex Farnsley will be have its
first public screening on Sunday, June 28, at 1:30 pm at the San Diego County Library El
Cajon Branch. The project was filmed in El Cajon, a small town just east of San Diego. The
screening is free to the public.
Stories of the war and turmoil in Iraq
continue to appear on the pages of our newspapers and on the screens of our
televisions, but even after years of coverage the story of the Chaldeans, the Catholics of
Iraq, is seldom told.
As three generations of storytellers
relate their experiences, we gain new insight into the harrowing circumstances that forced
so many to flee their country. They share their struggles, successes, disappointments,
and hopes for their future in America.
Kidnappings and murders have devastated
a people who have been Christians since the second century A.D. Prior to the war
there were over one million Chaldeans in Iraq, but today less than half that number remain.
Many of the recent refugees have barely
escaped with their lives and many have suffered devastating physical and
emotional scars. They have come to California to join the thousands who have come before them.
Daniel is 17 and is torn between his
heritage and his desire to fit in with his American teenage friends. He struggles with the
restrictions on dating in the Chaldean community and suffered the taunts of
“terrorist” and “why don’t you go back to your own country,” from his classmates after
the events of 9/11.
Ron tells us about his parent’s arranged
marriage, and how a Chaldean tradition disrupted his mother’s funeral.
Besma describes her family’s frightening
flight from Iraq to keep her 11-year-old brother from being drafted into Sadaam’s
army to fight in the Iran Iraq War. If they had been caught her parents would have been
hanged and the children imprisoned.
Mery’s family fled to keep her young
brothers from being drafted to fight the Coalition Forces in the Gulf War. Her parents have
been unable to get meaningful employment here and one of her brothers has
abandoned the family and moved away with his new American wife. She feels he is ashamed
of his heritage and that he has become completely “whitewashed.”
Salah was an art teacher in Baghdad
and tells the story of how a large painting of Jesus survived the destruction of his
family’s belongings untouched.
Wadie is in his 80s. He left Iraq in
1947 to pursue the promise of the American Dream. He has had a successful career in
California politics and served 28 years in the state Assembly and Senate.
Tommy is a hip-hop singer whose
lyrics upset the Chaldean Church. His music video about the Iraq War has attracted
worldwide attention. “Stories from Baghdad U.S.A.” will
also shine a light on the strong family values and work ethic that contribute to
American culture, and how that very culture threatens to erode the admirable heritage and
traditions of the Chaldeans.
Kevin King and Alex Farnsley are
documentary filmmakers who often focus on the problems young people have on the
road to adulthood. Their work has earned several regional Emmy’s, and their film,
Dark and
Bloody Ground,
which chronicles the impact of a violent murder on two families in a
small town in Kentucky, was recently awarded the coveted Gold Circle Award from the
Caucus for Producers, Writers & Directors in Los Angeles. (additional biographical
information: www.baghdadusa.com)
The film will be broadcast on the San
Diego County Television Network in the fall of this year. The filmmakers will also
pursue national and international television distribution and enter it in film
festivals across North America and in the Middle East.
The 45-minute documentary was made with
the cooperation of the Chaldean community of El Cajon, Chaldean-Middle
Eastern Social Services, St. Peter Chaldean Catholic Cathedral, and San Diego State
University. Zina Salem and Besma Coda, of
Chaldean-Middle Eastern Social Services, were instrumental in guiding Farnsley and
King in making contacts within the community. Chaldean-Middle Eastern Social Services
is an organization offering cultural services to aid in maximizing the potential and
success of Chaldean communities in San Diego County. CMSS’s mission is to help
Chaldean and Middle Eastern communities in San mDiego to pave the way towards a better
life through assimilation, education and
programs that will provide them with
skills to become productive citizens of America. CMSS will aid in developing community
skills and increasing cross-cultural understanding.
This project is made possible, in part,
by a grant from the California Council for the Humanities as part of the Council’s
statewide California Stories Initiative. The Council is an independent non-profit
organization and a state affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities. For more
information on the Council visit
www.californiastories.org
.
This program was funded in part by an
award from the San Diego County Cable
Television and Telecommunications Review
Commission.
For more information on the project
contact the filmmakers directly:
kingkut@mail.com
or
alex@filmalex.com
www.baghdadusa.com
for photographs and
clips.
