The
Weekend Australian
SAT 20 MAY 2006
TROUBLE IN TIMOR
By Graeme Blundell
David Wenham and a cast of East Timorese amateurs are stunning in a new ABC
drama about the bloody history of the world's newest nation, writes Graeme
Blundell
IT has been easy not to remember the tragedy of East Timor, so overwhelmed did
we become by September 11, wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and terrorist bombings
in Madrid, Bali and London. It was understandable that we did not recall the
executions, massacres, torture, the cycle of rape and sexual violence that so
marked East
The unwilling colony was an abandoned and almost forgotten half-island.
In 1975,
The invasion was effectively condoned by the
The decades of slaughter, some of the worst relative to population in recent
history, hardly raised a political eyebrow in this country.
In 1999,
The ABC's compelling two-part drama series Answered by Fire, co-produced with
the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, is the story of what happened. It's
enough to make anyone who watches feel ashamed of our collective amnesia.
This series brings it all back with startling authority just as the ravaged
country is facing new challenges. Director Jessica Hobbs calls this sober drama
``a story of parallels: a contrast of personal journeys set against a political
background''. It covers the politics of covert intervention and overt abandonment
on the part of the
David Wenham is Mark Waldman, a decent enough Australian policeman, a UN
mission volunteer, commanding civilian police at the UN base at Nunura in
Alex Tilman is a brave young Timorese translator, Ismenio Soares, assigned to
Wenham's unit, and Isabelle Blais plays Julie Fortin,
an earnest Canadian policewoman on her first overseas mission.
Ismenio, his family torn apart by war, is cynical
about the UN, He can only see a nightmarish fate at
the hands of the Indonesian military. "No one gets
Waldman and Fortin, both unarmed, are emotionally unprepared for the barbarism
of the militia terror campaign. Neither understands a situation in which the
world expects them to keep the peace while ensuring the UN stays neutral.
Asked if he's a "mission junkie'' early in the first episode, Waldman
diffidently replies: "
After 78.5 per cent of Timorese vote for independence, it all ends in violence
by pro-Indonesian militias, UN abandonment and terrible guilt for the
peacekeepers. The knowledge that Australian intelligence was aware of
everything
"I felt it was important to work out what parts of this immense story we
could do well and with the right authenticity,'' she says. Her aim was to make
a program that would prompt people to say ``I want to know more about that''.
And she wants them to think about it so it never happens again.
"'Lest we forget' was my driving motivation,'' she says.
"A wake-up call, really, to what has been occurring just off our
shores.''
Running throughout is a question that becomes increasingly difficult to answer
as the series reaches its conclusion: how many generations will it take a
community shaped by armed resistance and guerilla war, and reduced to
shantytown poverty, to become a free and stable democracy, regardless of
expected future oil and gas revenues of $13 billion from the Timor Gap?
The script by Canadian executive producer Barbara Samuels, who developed the
idea in 1999 after one of her friends volunteered for the UN and was sent to
But it is the acting by the cast of East Timorese, with no formal experience,
that is spellbinding.
"Their willingness to reveal the pain of their recent history was a
revelation,'' she says. "I listened to hundreds of
stories of bravery, terror and hope. I don't remember a single person who had
not lost someone.''
She found casting the Timorese militia leaders difficult; many of them are
played by student activists and independence fighters who have fled
"They had been terrified and tortured by the same people I was asking them
to represent. I gained strength from their insistence that these scenes must be
accurate, as painful as they were to recreate.'' Watch, for
example, for an incandescent performance from Jose de Costa as Sico, the local militia leader; haughty, murderous,
sweating testosterone. In real life De Costa, having survived the Dili massacre (six of his siblings and his father were
killed), was captured by Indonesian police and tortured.
He spent four years in hiding and arrived in
The scenes between Wenham and de Costa are mesmerising.
So is Felisberto Araujo as Ismenio's father.
Wenham is the kind of actor who collaborates with the character he plays in
order to create an inseparable fusion of fact and fiction. It's increasingly
difficult to detect where his characters begin and where Wenham evanesces. And
he is terrific in this series, gravely intelligent and, out of respect for his
fellow actors one suspects, decently self-effacing for someone so charismatic.
Asked how closely he had followed events in
"I have to get to where you already are.''