A scene from Voces Inocentes.
El Salvador Mirrors the Middle East
How 9/11 Prompted Oscar Torres to Write a Film About Growing Up in War-torn Central America
Monday, June 11, 2007
The impact of the World Trade Center attacks in 2001 - so mercilessly beaten into our political mindset - has only slowly made it into our artistic and cultural consciousness. While the icon of September 11 has brought us absurd theater, like President Bush’s fighter pilot performance on an aircraft carrier signaling the end of the Iraq war nearly 3,000 American soldier deaths ago, it’s mostly been interpreted in terms of fear and anxiety. The TV show 24 is the most popular of the “fear art” that was spawned by 9/11.
But subtle influences can be discerned in an increasing number of venues, some seemingly disconnected entirely from the attacks themselves. Take Voces Inocentes (“Innocent Voices”), a Spanish language film that first aired two years ago at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. Based on an autobiographical tale of a child’s life in war-torn El Salvador, its artistic and intellectual roots are firmly in September 11.
Screenwriter Oscar Torres.
Screenwriter Oscar Torres was at UCSB last month as a guest of the Chicano Studies Department, which screened Voces Inocentes on May 22. Torres introduced his film and later, in a professor’s office, he described how the World Trade Center attacks shaped his poignant and emotional tale of children being pulled into wars that their parents have spawned. The writing of the film was “triggered by September 11,” said Torres, who also cautioned that the lessons of his story may be repeated as the U.S. tries to find an exit strategy from our failed war in Iraq.
In the early 1980s, Torres lived in the outskirts of San Salvador in a barrio named Cuscatancingo, adjacent to the guerilla controlled Chalatenango province. It was the height of the civil war when civilian casualties were their highest. By day, Salvadoran army patrols would enter his neighborhood and conscript young boys into the army. By night, the guerillas would come and do the same. For Torres and his generation of pre-teens, life was about clinging to boyhood while avoiding the ever-bloodier war.
After fleeing El Salvador in 1985 at the age of 14, Torres came to Los Angeles, lived with an uncle, and attended school where he was again pulled in two directions, first by school, then by the Salvadoran gangs that were gaining a foothold in east Los Angeles. “My life was so dark,” he recalled. “I suffered from a series of panic attacks.” They hit him with such frequency after his traumatic Salvadoran upbringing and chaotic American life that, at times, he thought he “was dying.”
He persevered, avoiding the gangs, and was accepted at UC Berkeley. But he dropped out after watching Cinema Paradiso, deciding he wanted a career in the movies instead. He moved back to Los Angeles, and started working in various Hollywood jobs.
Poster from the film Voces Inocentes.
After watching the fall of the Twin Towers, he was provoked to sit down and write out the trauma of his own childhood - the sudden death, the war, and the sense of loss. “When I sat down to write, I started to feel better,” Torres explained. “I had opened up something else. I kept digging and kept exploring.”
But as the movie was shown and widely pirated across El Salvador, “It was like people who had not taken a breath for years. And when they started coughing [after watching this movie] from a lack of breath, they suddenly began talking.” While writing the movie was a catharsis for Torres, he feels it was an even greater catharsis for El Salvador.
A battle scene from the film.
Comments
Once again, this is an example of the U.S. going astray of the intent of the Founding Fathers. As George Washington said in his farewell address: "Beware of foreign entanglements". And of course Eisenhower warned us of the "Military Industrial complex" in HIS farewell address as well.
The U.S. simply needs to stay out of the business of others but sadly we have a president bent on spreading "democracy" at the end of gun, while the voters of the opposition party have made Hillary Clinton the front-runner despite the fact that she voted to get us into the Iraq war.
For those who oppose endless foreign intervention, and are registered either as Democrats or Republicans, think real carefully before you vote in the primaries because now is the time to vote for a change in our foreign policy. Ron Paul and Dennis Kucinich are two examples who come to mind of a Republican and a Democrat who are seeking the presidential nomination of their parties who have been against the Iraq war from the start (who unlike some polticians, were somehow able to see through Bush's argument for war) and who have a long history of non-interventionist ideology.
As the bumper sticker says: "When the people lead, the leaders will follow".
billclausen (anonymous profile)
June 12, 2007 at 8:34 p.m. (Suggest removal)
i did live in cuscatancingo , that movie is a lie,did not happen that way ,i am 40 years old i left el salvador in 1988 , el huevo went to school named "la paz "
elhuevo (anonymous profile)
February 23, 2010 at 2:52 p.m. (Suggest removal)