
TV is the New Reading
‘American Herro’Documentary
is flawed, but worth a look
First and foremost, I enjoyed the tie-ins
between Minot and world events. I enjoyed the cozy conversation among family
friends and I liked the American story of hard work and perseverance leading to
the life lived by foreign relations worker Herro Mustafa, the subject of Kirk
Roos’ documentary “American Herro.”
Herro is a woman who grew up in the Midwest, a child of immigrants fleeing a
difficult life both in Iraq and in Iran. Zion Lutheran Church sponsored them as
refugees in the United States in 1976, when they moved to Minot, where Herro
grew up.
The film traced Herro’s upbringing through to her graduation. She set her
sights on an international stage, joining the U.S. Foreign Service in 1999,
working as part of the transitional government in Iraq, and as special adviser
to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. She now serves as senior Middle East
adviser to Vice President Joe Biden.
The narrative thread is a bit elusive. Roos has a capable grasp of visuals, but
the film seems a bit haphazard, with images from the ’70s and conversations with
the folks who sponsored and welcomed the Mustafa family, the conditions they
experienced, and then some of Herro’s work with the State Department, the fall
of Saddam Hussein, a conversation with her family, a sparse conversation with
the filmmaker about growing up in Minot that launched into an overseas tour of
the family’s roots in Iraq. It’s sort of chronological but not completely,
which may be why it seems to jump about a bit.
I did enjoy the reflections of friends, family, colleagues and coworkers
talking about their experiences with Herro. As the film progressed, however, I
realized what was standing out to me was how much it was talking around
her. It seemed a bit incidental, talking about, oh, say, how loud the family is
when the cameras aren’t there, about neighbors’ experiences 30 years ago, about
how life goes on in Washington, D.C., while Herro is overseas, returning to her
childhood home in Minot and every (usually avoidable) instance in which the
film-maker inserted himself into the narrative.
Every such moment represented, in my opinion, a missed opportunity to just pull
back and let Herro talk about her own experiences -- and honestly, for her
father, Abdul, to talk about his. He’d been a writer and a protestor of Saddam
Hussein’s regime, part of why his family had to flee, and his remaining family
was persecuted, interrogated as to his whereabouts. Abdul Mustafa published a
newspaper in Iraq. He protested the use of chemical weapons in the Kurdish region
in northern Iraq. The portion of his story Roos included was at least as
compelling as his daughter’s.
Experiences
And that’s not to say her voice wasn’t heard. In returning to visit her
parents’ relatives in Iraq, for example, Herro talked about meeting them and
seeing her parents in them and feeling like she’d known them her whole life.
Sharing their time, their hospitality, the fun and celebration of a dance, that
was easily as interesting as the work she’d done with the State
Department -- itself a solid reflection of her father’s philo- sophy that hard
work leads to success.
From an address to her high school class about following their dreams to a
scholarship to George Washington University to her work as an experienced
diplomat and speaker of eight languages, Herro was involved through her work with
the transitional government in bringing Iraqi women into the political process
and improving their economic situation. And just from the photos Roos included,
she’s clearly had such a positive and wide-ranging impact making connections
with people in her diplomatic work in a part of the world where we usually only
hear the negative, I guess I’d have enjoyed hearing more about that as well.
In that this is the film we got, I can still recommend it, particularly to
readers of this column. Minot audiences will enjoy a pleasant trip down Memory
Lane reminiscing with neighbors and where they are now, what’s happened in
their lives after Minot. It’s an interesting and informative piece, a snapshot
of a life and a moment in history. As Secretary Rice shares in the film, the
American experience is filled with stories, and Herro Mustafa has a
strong one to share.
All the more reason to tune in Tuesday night to enjoy the rebroadcast of
“American Herro” at 9 p.m. on PBS.
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