Afghan female filmmakers, who fled the Taliban, fear that the takeover will make Afghanistan a country without culture and will eventually lose its identity. They begged the world to not forget the Afghan people and to support its artists.

The Venice Film Festival organized a panel discussion on Saturday to give a platform to Sahraa Karimi, the first female president of the Afghan Film Organization, and documentary filmmaker Sahra Mani, who is presenting a project at the Venice film market fair, the Associated Press reported.

Karimi choked up while narrating about her own escape — in which she had just hours to decide whether to stay or leave — and all that had been lost after the Taliban completed their takeover of the country.

She cited numerous films that were in pre-and-post production, filmmaking workshops that had been organized, insurance policies negotiated for equipment, and said that Afghan directors were increasingly being welcomed at international film festivals. Karimi herself had presented a film at the Venice Film Festival in 2019.

“It was our dream to change the narrative of Afghanistan, because we were tired of those cliches about Afghanistan,” Karimi said.

“We wanted to produce films, movies, and to tell our stories from different angles, from different perspectives, to show the beauty of our country,” she said.

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But she said all of that has been lost, and that the country’s burgeoning filmmaking community had either fled or gone into hiding, with its archives now under Taliban control.

“Imagine a country without artists, a country without filmmakers, how can they defend its identity?” Karimi asked.

“Maybe we are not politically ambassadors, but we are ambassadors for our stories, we are ambassadors of our identity,” she added.

“We are those people that represent our identity to the world, through our films, through our music, through our creative works. But we are now homeless.”

She said she decided to flee on the morning of August 15, with just a few hours to make “the most difficult decision of your life: stay or leave.”

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Mani said even under the corrupt rule of Afghanistan’s ousted government, she had remained despite the daily security risks and everyday hassles — electricity cuts, internet outages — because she wanted to rebuild the country and restart its cultural life.

“We stayed. We were optimists,” she said.

But with the Taliban takeover, “it means we don’t have anything to fight for. We lost everything,” she added.

(With AP inputs)