Herat Films: The Shrines of Herat
Directed by John Baily
Synopsis
These videos were edited from seven hours of Super 8 film shot by John Baily during two years of ethnomusicological fieldwork carried out in the Herat region of western Afghanistan between 1973 and 1977. The footage was transferred and edited at the TV Unit of Queen’s University Belfast 1981-82. The non-synchronous sound is a problem at certain moments, but overall the editing has made the best of the image and sound available. All three films have a substantial amount of voice-over commentary. The films are of special interest because of the damage suffered by this region during many years of civil war. (This is the city referred to so poignantly in Baily’s later film Amir.) The Shrines of Herat shows four of its many Sufi mazar-s (shrines) for which it is famous: Seyed-e Mukhtar; Karrukh; Kabarzan; and Gazer Gah (the tomb of Ansari). Notable for its controversial visual representation of zikr.