A Night at the Movies: “The Island President”

categories: Cocktail Hour / Don't Talk About Politics / Getting Outside / Movies

6 comments


President Mohamed "Anni" Nasheed

President Mohamed "Anni" Nasheed

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Another trip over to Railroad Square Cinema in Waterville, Maine, to see Jon Shenk’s The Island President, a brand-new documentary featuring the incredibly charming and very courageous (and sadly now former, after threats of violence and a coup d’etat) president of the Maldives, a 400-mile chain of 2000 inexpressibly beautiful (as the film shows) islands off the southwestern tip of India.  The movie, though, is sad: the Maldives are in imminent danger of sinking under rising sea levels as global warming proceeds unchecked.  The happy part is that a man like Anni Nasheed, the president of the film’s title, exists.  After the screening director Jon Shenk came onscreen via Skype to take questions.  More courage and plain intelligence.   One thing he told us was about a reporter asking President Nasheed about the role of hope when it came to climate change and other world problems.  “I don’t hope,” the president answered.  “I work.”  Mr. Shenk also invited us to spread the word about the movie and about their website, which I duly do here.  It’s a beautiful movie, worth seeing on any basis, but as a call to action it’s unbeatable.  Please beg your local art theater and colleges to bring it to town.  And see it yourself.  And spread the word.  The Maldives–a meter and a half at the highest point–are sinking.  And as President Nasheed points out (walking in New York on the way to the United Nations campus), Manhattan won’t be far behind.

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Here is the synopsis from the official THE ISLAND PRESIDENT website, which I quote whole in the hopes it will catch your interest.  A great movie:

“Jon Shenk’s The Island President tells the story of President Mohamed Nasheed of the Maldives, a man confronting a problem greater than any other world leader has ever faced—the literal survival of his country and everyone in it.

“After leading a twenty-year pro-democracy movement against the brutal regime of Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, surviving repeated imprisonments and torture, Nasheed became president at 41, only to encounter a far more implacable adversary than a dictator—the ocean. Considered the lowest lying country in the world, a rise of a mere three meters in sea level would inundate the Maldives, rendering the country practically unlivable. Unless dramatic changes are made by the larger countries of the world, the Maldives, like a modern Atlantis, will disappear under the waves.

“As much as its plight is one-of-a-kind, the Maldives itself is a country like no other. A Shangri-la of breathtakingly beautiful turquoise reefs, beaches, and palm trees, the Maldives is composed of 1200 coral islands off of the Indian sub-continent, of which 200 are inhabited. Arrayed across 400 miles of open sea like necklace-shaped constellations, the Maldives is one of the most geographically dispersed nations on earth.

“Democracy came to the Maldives, a Sunni Muslim country, in 2008, in a way that was uncannily similar to the recent Middle Eastern populist revolts against autocrats in Tunisia, Egypt, and elsewhere. What made the Maldives movement different from the ones that have followed it is the existence of a clear opposition party, the Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP), which had in its co-founder, Nasheed, a popular and charismatic leader ready to usher his country into democracy. Educated in Sri Lanka and England, Nasheed proved to be an unusually shrewd and sophisticated politician who grasped that the only way he could stand up to the catastrophic issues of climate change facing his country would be to take the Maldives cause to the world stage.

“The Island President captures Nasheed’s first year of office, a time when he influences the direction of international events in a way that few leaders have ever done, even in countries many times the size of the Maldives. Nasheed’s story culminates in his trip to the Copenhagen Climate Summit in 2009, where the film provides a rare glimpse of the political horse-trading that goes on at such a top-level global assembly. Nasheed is unusually candid about revealing his strategies—leveraging the Maldives’ underdog position, harnessing the power of media, and overcoming deadlocks through an appeal to unity with other developing nations. Despite his country’s dire situation, Nasheed remains cool, pragmatic and flexible, willing to compromise and try again another day. When all hope fades for any kind of written accord to be signed, Nasheed makes a stirring speech which salvages an agreement. While Copenhagen is judged by many as a failure, it marked the first time in history that China, India, and the United States agreed to reduce carbon emissions.

“In this age of political consultants and talking points, it is almost unheard of nowadays for filmmakers to get the astonishing degree of access that director Jon Shenk and his filmmaking team secured from Nasheed in The Island President. An award-winning cinematographer as well as a director, Shenk suffuses The Island President with the unearthly beauty of the Maldives. Seen from the sky, set against the haunting music of Radiohead, the coral islands seem unreal, more like glowing iridescent creatures than geographic areas. The parallel is apt, as the Maldives are as endangered as any species, and unless strong actions are taken, this magical country could become extinct.”



  1. Tommy writes:

    It’s all hearsay to me – Google it. It may take a stretch of the imagination to play along, but it has traction in some circles, including one I peeked through a couple months ago.

  2. Tommy writes:

    I have trouble with the line – rising sea levels would inundate the Maldives, “rendering the country practically unlivable.” Practically??? Fascinating, also that an entire country, 2,000 or so islands stand only a little taller than Minute Bol, wonder how they catch fresh water, and I guess they don’t have too many waterfalls… Looks beautiful, though, through these Georgia sunglasses.

    • Bill writes:

      I guess as long as there are places to put stilts it would be livable, in a manner of speaking. They’re already having trouble with their fresh water supply, but yes, they do have fresh groundwater somehow.