Memories from the North: Film About How Saudis Lived through Invasion of Kuwait

Movie poster for Memories from the North
Movie poster for Memories from the North
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Memories from the North: Film About How Saudis Lived through Invasion of Kuwait

Movie poster for Memories from the North
Movie poster for Memories from the North

Abdulmohsen Al-Mutairi’s movie “Memories from the North” deals with how we cultivate our collective and personal memories as it highlights the personal memory and childhood experiences of the Saudis who lived through the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait three decades ago.

The documentary gives us an in-depth view of how the experiences of those who had been on the outside looking in, not directly involved in what happened but were impacted by it in one way or another as the flames fanned further than their eyes could see.

Starring several people who thought they had overcome the emotional damage left by this experience, only to come to grips with how what happened affected them over the past three decades.

Al-Mutairi tells Asharq Al-Awsat: “The experiences of those who appear in the movie are shared across the Gulf, who had undergone this unprecedented historical episode that left an impact on an entire generation. The movie showcases how they lived in detail and includes many beautiful and poignant images.”

“The Gulf has a trove of ancient tales, folk legends, and oral narratives passed from generation to generation that are worth sharing with the world and reflecting how we see things, our culture, and our relationship, as people of the rich Arabian Peninsula, with our history.”

The Saudi production was screened in Kuwait on Tuesday on the anniversary of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait that began on August 2, 1990, after winning the Best Documentary Short Film Award at the 2022 Saudi Film Festival and an Honorable Mention at the London International Monthly Film Festival.



Captain Cook Statue in Sydney Defaced Ahead of Australia’s National Day 

A statue of Captain James Cook is covered in red paint after being vandalized, in Randwick, Sydney, Australia, 24 January 2025. It is the second time in 12 months that the statue has been vandalized. (EPA)
A statue of Captain James Cook is covered in red paint after being vandalized, in Randwick, Sydney, Australia, 24 January 2025. It is the second time in 12 months that the statue has been vandalized. (EPA)
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Captain Cook Statue in Sydney Defaced Ahead of Australia’s National Day 

A statue of Captain James Cook is covered in red paint after being vandalized, in Randwick, Sydney, Australia, 24 January 2025. It is the second time in 12 months that the statue has been vandalized. (EPA)
A statue of Captain James Cook is covered in red paint after being vandalized, in Randwick, Sydney, Australia, 24 January 2025. It is the second time in 12 months that the statue has been vandalized. (EPA)

A statue in Sydney of British explorer James Cook, captain of the first Western ship to reach the east coast of Australia, was sprayed with red paint and damaged two days before Australia's national day, authorities said on Friday.

It was the second time the statue has been defaced and vandalized in the last year. Police said that they had begun an investigation and that several items had been found near the statue.

Local councilor Carolyn Martin said the vandals may have scaled a fence around the statue using a ladder, which they left behind.

"It's an absolute mess," Martin told radio station 2GB. "They have splattered paint all over it, then they have managed to get to the top of the statue and they've knocked his hand off and also part of his face and nose."

For many Indigenous Australians, who trace their lineage on the continent back 50,000 years and make up about 4% of the country's population of 27 million, the Australia Day holiday is known as Invasion Day, symbolizing the destruction of their cultures by European settlers.

Many Indigenous groups want Australia to drop celebrations or move the date, which marks the anniversary of the arrival of the British First Fleet in 1788.

Every year on Jan. 26, protesters rally against the mistreatment of Indigenous people, who are by most socio-economic measures the most disadvantaged people in the country.

A survey by the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper on Friday showed the support to keep Jan. 26 as Australia's national day surged to 61% from 47% over the past two years, signaling a shift in voters' sentiment.