International media attention given to Lebanese censorship
usually focuses on the banning of Western films, like The Da Vinci Code or
the animated Persepolis. But the real victims of the Directorate
for General Security (DGSG, from Direction Générale de la Sûreté
Générale) and its zealous censors are local film and theater directors, who
face an often arduous process to secure permits for filming, screening, or
staging creative works. DGSG’s follows its owninternal mandate,
and its directives can be stretched in any direction: censors decree that
creative works should not “pose any danger or harm to Lebanon,” nor should they
upset “political or military sensitivities” or incite “sectarian or factional
discord.” Unlike cases of paper publications, the censorship process for local
film and theater unfolds entirely outside the courts. While publications can
only be censored if a lawsuit is brought against them (and authors and
journalists can defend themselves in the Court of Publications), directors
cannot question or appeal the General Directorate’s decision to bowdlerize or
entirely ban their work.
In recent years, local civil society organizations have
begun to speak up against this practice; these voices seek not only to curb
censorship, but to limit the DGSG’s extensive powers and curb its considerable
autonomy from even the ministers of the interior, who have thus far been unable
to assert control over it, particularly in matters of censorship.
Last year, a coalition of the major cultural organizations
in Lebanon (such as Metropolis
DC,Ashkal Alwan, Né à Beyrouth, among others) grouped
under Marsad al-Raqaba (“The Censorship Observatory”), and
organized the first collective effort to provide a comprehensive
assessment of censorship exercised by state institutions. Led by
prominent human rights lawyer Nizar Saghieh, the Observatory’s research exposed
the degree to which political and religious leaders are directly involved in
censorship cases. It documented how the General Directorate’s censorship
department routinely sends films and other creative works that might upset
religious institutions to these bodies (like Dar al-Fatwa, the
highest Sunni religious authority, or the Catholic Information Center),
and almost always complies with their wishes on whether to excise scenes or ban
a work altogether. In May, for example, following a request from the Catholic
Information Center, the DGSG asked that Joe Bou Eid’s Tannoura Maxiremove
certain scenes that were allegedly “offensive to Christianity.”
Similarly, individual political figures are also routinely
consulted on creative works that mention them or their parties. Films on the
civil war have been routinely censored since the nineties on the basis that
references to the conflict “threatens civil peace.” In actuality, however, it
only threatens the peace of mind of the warlords who are still in power. For
example, Randa Shahal, who represents an older generation of Lebanese directors
who tackled the civil war, saw many of her films brutally cut—the most famous
of which is A Civilized People (1999). Simon El Habre was
forced to excise six minutes of his 2009 documentary One Man Village(the
banned scene can be viewed here) because it
mentioned the role of the Progressive Socialist Party during the civil war.
Last year, Danielle Arbid’s film Beirut Hotel was banned
because it referred to the 2005 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik
Hariri.
Marsad Al-Raqaba’s efforts have been followed by others.
Encouraged by the region’s year of uprisings, activists have acquired an
increasingly diminishing tolerance for security forces’ control over creative
expression. Only last week, the Skeyes Center for Media and Cultural Freedom
(SKeyes)—an organization established in 2007 by the Samir Kassir Foundation to
monitor and publicize violations of freedom of the press and artistic
expression in the Levant—launched Mamnou3 (“Prohibited”),
a mockumentary series that parodies the internal workings of the DGSG’s
censorship department. In one clip,
an officer of the Directorate smiles smugly as he edits a famous theater
director’s script, pleased with his own creativity in altering the text to suit
“public morals.” Since Lebanon lacks Internet regulation, SKeyes hopes to avoid
a possible ban by focusing the campaign online and promoting it via social
media platforms. Although it is too early to gauge whether Mamnou3 will
provoke a backlash from the General Directorate, the campaign has already
received considerable media attention in Lebanon andbeyond,
and the first three episodes released on YouTube have already attracted almost
11,000 views in the week since their release. Seven additional episodes are
planned.
Both SKeyes and Marsad Al-Raqaba call for ending the General
Directorate’s lack of oversight and establishing instead an independent
regulatory body to apply a rating system for films or plays. The new body would
also receive complaints after works have been screened or staged and rule on
whether or not the work should be censored—rather than the current practice of
censoring a film or play while still under production.
Daunting challenges remain, and a number of forces impede
progress: an intransigent political class, aggressive security forces unwilling
to surrender arbitrary powers, and conservative citizens who worry about
uncensored creative expression. Civil society organizations will have to put
aside their differences and work harder at coordinating their efforts—much like
the defenders of censorship have; in the early 2000s, religious leaders established
the Commission to Preserve Values in an effort to monitor media ethics and
morals. The organization has made a number of complaints to the office of the
public prosecutor regarding scantily clad women in TV programs and on
billboards, and has called on the state to preserve “people’s
dignity” and to censor TV programs, films and publications. In its most recent statement on
May 23, the commission called on the media to practice self-censorship and on
the government to ensure media compliance with ethical standards.
Significantly, the statement began by describing the military establishment as
the “custodian” of Lebanon—linking between censorship and the security forces.
Despite this, there remains much hope. In the past two
years, thanks to Marsad al-Raqaba’s efforts, the previously-opaque censoring
process is much clearer—and knowledge of it is half the battle. A number of
government officials have lent their support; former Minister of Culture Tarek
Mitri’s pressure helped to reverse the
ban on the film version of Persepolis (which had been banned because
it allegedly displeased the head of DGSG General Wafiq Jizzini—who is
purportedly close to Hizbullah). Former Minister of the Interior Ziad Baroud
also tried to stop the DGSG from cutting the scene mentioned above from One
Man Village. Mitri has also been a vocal supporter of abolishing
pre-production censorship to allow films and all cultural products to circulate
freely.
And as the ongoing Mamnou3 campaign itself
shows, creative expression is alive and kicking in Lebanon—as are creative ways
around the censors’ excisions.