Casablanca Calling

December 1, 2014
Jeremiah Birnbaum


Moroccos first female Muslim leaders set out to change their country

Casablanca Calling is the story of a quiet social revolution in Morocco. In a country where over 60% of women have never been to school, a new generation of women have started work as official Muslim leaders. They are called Morchidat or spiritual guides.

Casablanca Calling follows three Morchidat – Hannane, Bouchra and Karima – as they set out to change their country, starting at street level. The Morchidat have a mission: to teach an Islam based on compassion, tolerance and equality, and to separate its true teachings from prejudice, misinterpretation and misunderstanding. Their work takes them into mosques, schools, homes, orphanages, prisons, and out in the countryside. They support the education of women and girls’; campaign against early marriage; and encourage young people to build a better Morocco, rather than dreaming of life in the West.

Casablanca Calling is an intimate portrait of three Morchidat, a society in transition, and a mission to educate a nation.

The Background

In May 2003, Morocco was shaken by a set of violent suicide bombings by radical Islamic fundamentalists, which killed 45 people in Casablanca. Since then, the Moroccan government has taken steps to reform the religious landscape in the country.

In 2005 as part of this effort, King Mohammed VI introduced an innovative – and controversial – programme to train women as religious leaders or Morchidat. 50 Morchidat are selected for the rigorous training each year and on graduation, each Morchidat is assigned to a mosque. In their teaching, these women preach a balanced and tolerant version of Islam, and they provide important support and guidance to their communities.

The mosques have always played a big role in the spiritual, social and educational life of Morocco, but until now they have been dominated by men. The mosque was always the territory of the Imam, but in a break from the past, the Morchidat not only work in the mosque but go out to meet people in the streets, in homes, prisons, schools, orphanages and hospitals. They offer spiritual, moral, social and personal guidance and support. Their big challenge is to help people to understand the true teachings of Islam and separate these from the restrictive traditions which have often become confused with religious truth. But they are working in a society where over 60% per cent of women are illiterate – and over 80% in rural areas – compared with around 40% of men.

Making the Film: a Personal View from Director, Rosa Rogers

casablanca

We first read about the Morchidat on a filming trip to China and we were intrigued. At the time there was a lot of debate about the leadership roles women could take in Christianity and at the same time, in the wake of 9/11 and the London bombings, anti-Islam sentiments were high in much of the popular media. We read that the Morchidat were part of wider reforms in Morocco aimed at giving women more rights and we wanted to find out more.

We approached the Moroccan embassy in the UK to say we were interested in making a documentary about the Morchidat and showed them examples of films we’d made before. Almost a year later, we were told the Ministry of Islamic Affairs in Morocco welcomed our proposal and we were invited to meet them in Rabat.

In a long meeting, we tried to explain the kind of film we wanted to make and found there were a lot of suspicions. There had been international news coverage about the Morchidat and the Ministry felt much of it had been misrepresentation. They wanted to know our intentions, what we understood about Islam, what we wanted to say about Islam. They agreed to us going ahead in principle. But we soon discovered that the concept of observational documentary was a new one, and that each trip would become a new struggle to regain permissions.

On a visit to a mosque where a Morchidat was working, we were overwhelmed by the sheer number of women and their enthusiasm for the work of the Morchidat. They all told us that before this they had nobody to talk to about how to resolve problems in their lives, no one to explain their religion to them, no support in everyday spiritual life. They convinced us this was a story worth telling.

We met Bouchra and Karima in the final stages of their training and they spoke about the problems facing Morocco and the need for change. They wanted to see girls getting an education, an end to early marriage, and young people developing their full potential and choosing to build a better Morocco rather migrate to the West. We’d found two of our characters and we met Hannane soon after.

Filming Casablanca Calling was the most challenging experience of my filming career. The endlessly changing permits needed for every place we filmed in and the cultural suspicion of cameras meant that for every day we were able to film, there were five or six days which came to an abrupt halt. We’d hoped to get all filming done within 10 months – it ended up being closer to 3 years.

Despite the difficulties, I believe passionately that the work of the Morchidat is groundbreaking and that their story must be told. I feel strongly about the misrepresentation of Islam in much of Western mainstream media and want to show a different side. We wanted to tell human stories which transcend cultural divides, and simultaneously illuminate everyday truths about the lives of ordinary women in the Arab world – lives which are often closed and off-limits to those outside. As newly elected Islamic governments come to power across the Arab world – the role of the Morchidat in Morocco seems even more important. How – within an Islamic framework – can women achieve their full potential? And how can ideas and attitudes that have been entrenched for generations be overturned?

Read more at http://www.casablancacalling.com/
Article and Images from http://www.casablancacalling.com/.

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