Angels living in "hell"

Greyson 2022-01-21 08:02:07

A documentary called "For Sama" records the real life in the war. It should not be called life, but survival in the war.

The documentary was called Varde, who was originally a student in the economics and trade department of a university, but a sudden war changed their destiny.

Wade stayed in Aleppo with her husband Hamza (doctor) and others, where they got married and had children, where they rescued civilians injured in the war.

This little girl suckling is the protagonist of the film-Sama, who was born during the war and grew up in the war. Sama, who grew up listening to gunshots and explosions, would not yell and cry like other children whenever these frightening sounds sounded in the city. This also made Ward feel very sad.

Sama is lucky because she survived. There are many scenes in this film that record children who were injured or even died in the war.

They all died under the explosion of the bomb, and the dust from the bomb explosion still covered their faces. They are the most innocent people in this war. They came to this world, and they stopped walking before they realized the beauty of the world.

Babies born in disasters seem to bring hope.

This is the newborn baby in the documentary. He stayed in his mother's belly for nine months. His mother's accidental injury brought him to the world ahead of schedule.

When he first emerged from his mother's abdomen, he was lifeless. However, the doctor did not give up. He pressed his heart, rubbed his back, raised his weak feet and slapped his back. Finally greeted the baby's cry.

But I don't know the life of such a war, and I don't know which day he will encounter a life with a bomb. For the new born, is it fortunate or unfortunate?

As children, they knew that this was war. There were guns, bombs, some wounded, and some died. But they still have to survive in this place. There are memories of war in their childhood. For adults, this may be a "daily soap opera". But for them it may be painful memories that can never be smoothed out.

Although seeing the children smile, they still feel depressed. If they live in a peaceful country, their childhood should be full of colors, love, and sunshine.

They should teach in a spacious and bright classroom, not in a narrow basement, and not in a class out of fear and fear.

Sama means the sky. The sky is so vast, with clouds floating, the sky should not be full of the roar of airplanes, it should be the roar of birds flying by.

May there be no children living like Sama in the world, you are angels and hope. You should have a good life.

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Extended Reading
  • Demario 2022-03-25 09:01:20

    The real war zone, accustomed to death, was constantly shocked and exclaimed OMG during the watching process. As a member of the resistance army, the orientation is of course that he is the righteous side, but while showing the cruelty of the war, it also deliberately ignores who and who started the war behind. Of course, the greatest value of this documentary is the first-hand material in the siege of Aleppo. All kinds of tragic situations are like a spectacle, showing the destruction of life by the war, which is so fierce and terrifying that people are speechless. In the film, a baby born by caesarean section from the pregnant woman who was bombed was obviously lifeless, but suddenly opened her eyes and opened her mouth and cried out during the continuous treatment that the doctor did not give up. I had been holding my breath just now, and only then did I breathe a sigh of relief. This is probably the power of documentaries. PS: There are a lot of shots from aerial photography, I'm really curious that they even have drones in this situation.

  • Vaughn 2022-03-19 09:01:08

    The story about the bombing that the father told the little girl was really a scene that the screenwriter couldn't make up.

For Sama quotes

  • Waad Al-Khateab: Sama. You're the most beautiful thing in our life. But what a life I've brought you into. You didn't choose this. Will you ever forgive me?

  • Waad Al-Khateab: The sound of our songs was louder than the bombs falling outside