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.



Letter Written Onboard the Titanic before It Sank Sells for Almost $400,000 at Auction

 This undated handout picture provided by the auctioneers Henry Aldridge & Son, England, shows a lettercard, penned by one of the Titanic's most well-known survivors from onboard the ship days before it sank, which has sold for 300,000 pounds ($399,000) at auction. (Henry Aldridge & Son via AP)
This undated handout picture provided by the auctioneers Henry Aldridge & Son, England, shows a lettercard, penned by one of the Titanic's most well-known survivors from onboard the ship days before it sank, which has sold for 300,000 pounds ($399,000) at auction. (Henry Aldridge & Son via AP)
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Letter Written Onboard the Titanic before It Sank Sells for Almost $400,000 at Auction

 This undated handout picture provided by the auctioneers Henry Aldridge & Son, England, shows a lettercard, penned by one of the Titanic's most well-known survivors from onboard the ship days before it sank, which has sold for 300,000 pounds ($399,000) at auction. (Henry Aldridge & Son via AP)
This undated handout picture provided by the auctioneers Henry Aldridge & Son, England, shows a lettercard, penned by one of the Titanic's most well-known survivors from onboard the ship days before it sank, which has sold for 300,000 pounds ($399,000) at auction. (Henry Aldridge & Son via AP)

A lettercard penned by one of the Titanic's most well-known survivors from onboard the ship, days before it sank, has sold for 300,000 pounds ($399,000) at auction.

In the note, written to the seller's great-uncle on April 10, 1912, first-class passenger Archibald Gracie wrote of the ill-fated steamship: “It is a fine ship but I shall await my journeys end before I pass judgment on her.”

The letter was sold to a private collector from the United States on Saturday, according to auction house Henry Aldridge & Son in Wiltshire, England. The hammer price far exceeded the initial estimate price of 60,000 pounds.

The letter is believed to be the sole example in existence from Gracie from onboard the Titanic, which sank off Newfoundland after hitting an iceberg, killing about 1,500 people on its maiden voyage.

Auctioneer Andrew Aldridge described it as an “exceptional museum grade piece.”

Gracie, who jumped from the ship and managed to scramble onto an overturned collapsible boat, was rescued by other passengers onboard a lifeboat and was taken to the R.M.S. Carpathia. He went on to write “The Truth about the Titanic,” an account of his experiences, when he returned to New York City.

Gracie boarded the Titanic in Southampton on April 10, 1912, and was assigned first-class cabin C51. His book is seen as one of the most detailed accounts of the events of the night the ship sank, Aldridge said.

Gracie did not fully recover from the hypothermia he suffered, and died of complications from diabetes in late 1912.