Shapiro, Lee

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{{epname|Shapiro, Lee}}
 
{{epname|Shapiro, Lee}}
 
[[File:LeeShapiro.png|thumb|300px|Lee Shapiro]]
 
[[File:LeeShapiro.png|thumb|300px|Lee Shapiro]]
'''Lee Shapiro''' (1949–1987) was an American [[documentary film]]maker. His one feature-length film, ''Nicaragua Was Our Home'', was released in 1986. It was filmed in [[Nicaragua]] among the [[Miskito people|Miskito Indian]]s who were then fighting against Nicaraguan government forces.  
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'''Lee Shapiro''' (1949–1987) was an American [[documentary film]]maker. His one feature-length film, ''Nicaragua Was Our Home'', was released in 1986. It was filmed in [[Nicaragua]] among the [[Miskito]]s who were then fighting against Nicaraguan government forces.
In 1987, Shapiro and fellow filmmaker Jim Lindelof were killed while filming in [[Afghanistan]] during the [[Soviet–Afghan War]].  
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Shapiro received the [[Presidential Medal of Freedom]] in recognition of his efforts.
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Shapiro was motivated by his compassion for fellow human beings, and a desire to bring them joy and fulfillment in their lives. When he became aware of intense [[suffering]], he used his skills as a filmmaker to bring the tragedy of those people's lives to the world, hoping to lessen their suffering through public action.
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In 1987, Shapiro and fellow filmmaker Jim Lindelof were killed while filming in [[Afghanistan]] during the [[Soviet–Afghan War]]. Their desire was to bring the suffering of the Afghan people to the attention of the world. While it took a further 20 years for this to happen, their sacrifice for the sake of those unable to tell their own tragic story bore fruit finally due to the efforts of Shapiro's friends.  
  
 
==Life==
 
==Life==
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<blockquote>Our friendship is one of the most rewarding and endearing relationships of my life. Lee is a very jovial and stable person. He has that rare gift of being able to find a joyful outlook on every activity he is engaged in.<ref name=Victoria>Victoria Clevenger, [https://tparents.org/Library/Unification/Talks2/Shapiro/Shapiro-871200.htm Lee Dittman Shapiro] ''TParents.org'', December 1987. Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref></blockquote>
 
<blockquote>Our friendship is one of the most rewarding and endearing relationships of my life. Lee is a very jovial and stable person. He has that rare gift of being able to find a joyful outlook on every activity he is engaged in.<ref name=Victoria>Victoria Clevenger, [https://tparents.org/Library/Unification/Talks2/Shapiro/Shapiro-871200.htm Lee Dittman Shapiro] ''TParents.org'', December 1987. Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref></blockquote>
  
Shapiro filmed the first graduation ceremony at UTS, in 1977. After graduating, he went to make various documentary films for the Unification Church, including "Ocean Challenge" (1980). He continued making films for various organizations, including [[CAUSA International]] an [[anticommunism|anticommunist]] organization launched in 1980, focused on [[Latin America]].
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Shapiro filmed the first graduation ceremony at UTS, in 1977. After graduating, he went to make various documentary films for the Unification Church, including "Ocean Challenge" (1980). He continued making films for various organizations, including [[CAUSA International]], an [[anticommunism|anticommunist]] organization launched in 1980 that focused on [[Latin America]].
  
 
Shapiro married Linda Krout Shapiro on July 1, 1982 at a marriage Blessing Ceremony officiated by Reverend [[Sun Myung Moon]] and [[Hak Ja Han]] Moon.
 
Shapiro married Linda Krout Shapiro on July 1, 1982 at a marriage Blessing Ceremony officiated by Reverend [[Sun Myung Moon]] and [[Hak Ja Han]] Moon.
  
Through his work in Latin America, Shapiro witnessed the situation in [[Nicaragua]] of the [[Miskito]] people and decided to make a documentary film about their suffering. The result was ''Nicaragua Was Our Home'' (1985).<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0347654/ Nicaragua Was Our Home] ''IMDb''. Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref>  
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Through his work in Latin America, Shapiro witnessed the situation in [[Nicaragua]] of the [[Miskito]] people and decided to make a documentary film about their suffering:
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<blockquote>In Nicaragua, a new side of Lee Shapiro emerged that none of us had seen before: He was willing to live in the jungle and even starve in order to bring the Miskito Indians' situation to the attention of the free world. When he returned, I could see that his drive and his commitment to film making was now turned towards the saving of people and nations. There was a fearlessness about this. We knew he'd lived in great danger, but he never referred to it.<ref name=Victoria/></blockquote>
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The result was ''Nicaragua Was Our Home'' (1985).<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0347654/ Nicaragua Was Our Home] ''IMDb''. Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref>  
  
 
Shapiro died in October, 1987, ambushed while filming in [[Afghanistan]].<ref> William G. Blair, [https://www.nytimes.com/1987/10/28/world/2-americans-reported-killed-in-an-ambush-in-afghanistan.html 2 Americans Reported Killed In an Ambush in Afghanistan] ''The New York Times'' (October 28, 1987). Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref>
 
Shapiro died in October, 1987, ambushed while filming in [[Afghanistan]].<ref> William G. Blair, [https://www.nytimes.com/1987/10/28/world/2-americans-reported-killed-in-an-ambush-in-afghanistan.html 2 Americans Reported Killed In an Ambush in Afghanistan] ''The New York Times'' (October 28, 1987). Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref>
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==''Nicaragua Was Our Home''==
 
==''Nicaragua Was Our Home''==
 
[[File:Shapiro-871200_a.jpg|thumb|350px|Lee Shapiro with Miskito Indian children in Nicaragua, 1985]]
 
[[File:Shapiro-871200_a.jpg|thumb|350px|Lee Shapiro with Miskito Indian children in Nicaragua, 1985]]
''Nicaragua Was Our Home'' was filmed in [[Nicaragua]] among the [[Miskito people|Miskito Indian]]s who were then fighting against Nicaraguan government forces. It features interviews with Miskito Indian people and some non-Miskito clergy who lived among them concerning actions of the government against them, including bombing of villages, shootings, and forced removal of people from their homes.<ref name=NYT72986>[https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A0DE5D9173BF93AA15754C0A960948260&sec=&pagewanted=print ON 13, SANDINISTAS VS. MISKITOS], ''[[New York Times]]'', July 29, 1986</ref>  The film was shown on some [[PBS]] stations<ref name=envio>[http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/3245 How to Read the Reagan Administration: The Miskito Case]</ref><ref>[http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=1555 Public TV Tilts Toward Conservatives], [[Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting]]</ref> and at the 1986 [[Sundance Film Festival]].<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/Sections/Awards/Sundance_Film_Festival/1986 Sundance Film Festival: 1986] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090620045237/http://www.imdb.com/Sections/Awards/Sundance_Film_Festival/1986 |date=2009-06-20 }}, [[Internet Movie Database|IMDB]]</ref>
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''Nicaragua Was Our Home'' was filmed in [[Nicaragua]] among the [[Miskito]]s who were then fighting against Nicaraguan government forces. It features interviews with Miskito Indian people and some non-Miskito clergy who lived among them concerning actions of the government against them, including bombing of villages, shootings, and forced removal of people from their homes.<ref name=NYT72986>John Corry, [https://www.nytimes.com/1986/07/29/movies/on-13-sandinistas-vs-miskitos.html?sec=&pagewanted=print On 13, Sandinistas vs. Miskitos], ''The New York Times'' (July 29, 1986). Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref>  
  
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The film was shown nationally on [[PBS]] stations to critical acclaim, and at the 1986 [[Sundance Film Festival]] where it was nominated for a Documentary Grand Jury Prize, and at the Chicago International Film Festival where it was nominated for a Gold Hugo award for Best Documentary.<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0347654/awards/ ''Nicaragua Was Our Home'' Awards] ''IMDb''. Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref>
  
 
==Afghanistan==
 
==Afghanistan==
Shapiro and Lindelof spent six months inside [[Afghanistan]] traveling with the [[Mujahideen]], documenting the plight of the Afghan people under [[Soviet]] occupation. On October 9, 1987, they were ambushed and killed outside [[Kabul]]:
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After completing the film on the Miskitos in Nicaragua, Shapiro became interested in the situation in [[Afghanistan]]:
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<blockquote>Because there was so little coverage of the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, Lee wanted to get into the heart of the country and bring this tragedy to the world. ... Lee hoped that the film would move the public toward action that could help end the Afghan people's suffering.<ref name=Victoria/></blockquote>
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Shapiro contacted Aziz Sadat, an Afghan native who had come to the United States as a student in 1979 and had maintained close relations with the Afghan resistance. In September, 1986, Sadat and Shapiro arrived in Peshawar to make contact with Hezb-e Islami Gulbuddin, one of the largest and most militantly fundamentalist Islamic guerrilla groups. After spending two months there, Shapiro returned to the United States.
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There he met Jim Lindelof, a paramedic who had previously spent time in Afghanistan with a team providing medical care to rebels in Panjshir Valley. Both Lindelhof and Shapiro were frustrated with the lack of media coverage, and had the idea of shooting a documentary film to raise public awareness. Shapiro had received grant money for the film, and needed an assistant. Lindelhof was the right man for the job. In March 1987 they returned to Afghanistan.<ref>Nikki Finke, [https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-10-30-vw-11792-story.html Under Fire: An Afghan Odyssey : California Medical Technician and New Jersey Film Maker Give Their Lives Telling Story of Rebels] ''Los Angeles Times'' (October 30, 1987). Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref>
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Shapiro and Lindelof spent six months traveling with the [[Mujahideen]], documenting the plight of the Afghan people under [[Soviet]] occupation. However, before they could complete filming, they were ambushed and killed outside [[Kabul]]:
 
<blockquote>The campaign to target foreign journalists had more tragic results. Two American filmmakers, Lee Shapiro and Jim Lindelof, were apparently killed by a regime attack while traveling with the mujahidin. In 1986, Lindelof had been named paramedic of the year for his efforts training Afghan medical workers. In response to protests, Kabul stated it could not "guarantee the security of foreign subjects" who enter illegally, whose presence it views as "evidence" of "external interference."<ref>Craig Karp, [https://go.gale.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE%7CA6536321&sid=googleScholar&v=2.1&it=r&linkaccess=abs&issn=00417610&p=AONE&sw=w&userGroupName=nysl_oweb&isGeoAuthType=true&aty=geo Afghanistan: eight years of Soviet occupation] ''Department of State Bulletin'' 88(2132) (March 1988). Retrieved September 22, 2023.</ref></blockquote>  
 
<blockquote>The campaign to target foreign journalists had more tragic results. Two American filmmakers, Lee Shapiro and Jim Lindelof, were apparently killed by a regime attack while traveling with the mujahidin. In 1986, Lindelof had been named paramedic of the year for his efforts training Afghan medical workers. In response to protests, Kabul stated it could not "guarantee the security of foreign subjects" who enter illegally, whose presence it views as "evidence" of "external interference."<ref>Craig Karp, [https://go.gale.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE%7CA6536321&sid=googleScholar&v=2.1&it=r&linkaccess=abs&issn=00417610&p=AONE&sw=w&userGroupName=nysl_oweb&isGeoAuthType=true&aty=geo Afghanistan: eight years of Soviet occupation] ''Department of State Bulletin'' 88(2132) (March 1988). Retrieved September 22, 2023.</ref></blockquote>  
  
 
The [[Hezb-e Islami Gulbuddin|armed group]] they were traveling with reported that they had been ambushed by military forces of the [[Soviet Union]] or the [[Democratic Republic of Afghanistan|Afghan government]]. However, the details have been questioned, partly because of the poor reputation of the group's leader, [[Gulbuddin Hekmatyar]]:
 
The [[Hezb-e Islami Gulbuddin|armed group]] they were traveling with reported that they had been ambushed by military forces of the [[Soviet Union]] or the [[Democratic Republic of Afghanistan|Afghan government]]. However, the details have been questioned, partly because of the poor reputation of the group's leader, [[Gulbuddin Hekmatyar]]:
<blockquote>Two American journalists are believed dead in northwest Afghanistan, diplomatic and resistance forces say here. Filmmaker Lee Shapiro and his soundman, Jim Lindalos, both of New York, were killed Oct. 11, reportedly in a Soviet or Afghan government ambush, according to United States consular officials. However, the resistance group that accompanied the film team has a poor reputation among most informed observers, and doubts have arisen over whether the two Americans did indeed die in an Afghan government or Soviet attack.<ref>Edward Girardet, [https://www.csmonitor.com/1987/1028/oed.html Two US journalists reported killed in Afghanistan; details murky] ''Christian Science Monitor'' ( October 28, 1987). Retrieved September 22, 2023.</ref></blockquote>
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<blockquote>Two American journalists are believed dead in northwest Afghanistan, diplomatic and resistance forces say here. Filmmaker Lee Shapiro and his soundman, Jim Lindalos, both of New York, were killed Oct. 11, reportedly in a Soviet or Afghan government ambush, according to United States consular officials. However, the resistance group that accompanied the film team has a poor reputation among most informed observers, and doubts have arisen over whether the two Americans did indeed die in an Afghan government or Soviet attack.<ref>Edward Girardet, [https://www.csmonitor.com/1987/1028/oed.html Two US journalists reported killed in Afghanistan; details murky] ''Christian Science Monitor'' (October 28, 1987). Retrieved September 22, 2023.</ref></blockquote>
  
<blockquote>Filmmaker Lee Shapiro, who set out to show what horrors were being inflicted upon Afghanistan and its people during the Soviet invasion, remained in the country after he and other journalists were warned that they were in grave danger. While traveling to find and interview one of Afghanistan’s moderate leaders in his rural headquarters, Shapiro and his cameraman, Jim Lindelof, disappeared. They were reportedly caught in a fire fight between Soviet troops and the Mujaheddin. While their deaths were announced, their bodies were never found.<ref> Jennifer Merin, [https://awfj.org/cinema-citizen/2021/08/17/shadow-of-afghanistan-1959-2012-movie-review-2006-2012/?doing_wp_cron=1695425290.1649460792541503906250 Documentary Retroview: Shadow of Afghanistan 1959-2012 (2006, 2012)] ''Alliance of Women Film Journalists'' (Aug 17, 2021). Retrieved September 22, 2023.</ref></blockquote>
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Details of the incident remained unclear, even the exact date of their deaths was not ascertained, with some reports stating October 9 and others October 11. Their bodies were never recovered:
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<blockquote>Filmmaker Lee Shapiro, who set out to show what horrors were being inflicted upon Afghanistan and its people during the Soviet invasion, remained in the country after he and other journalists were warned that they were in grave danger. While traveling to find and interview one of Afghanistan’s moderate leaders in his rural headquarters, Shapiro and his cameraman, Jim Lindelof, disappeared. They were reportedly caught in a fire fight between Soviet troops and the Mujaheddin. While their deaths were announced, their bodies were never found.<ref name=Merin> Jennifer Merin, [https://awfj.org/cinema-citizen/2021/08/17/shadow-of-afghanistan-1959-2012-movie-review-2006-2012/?doing_wp_cron=1695425290.1649460792541503906250 Documentary Retroview: Shadow of Afghanistan 1959-2012 (2006, 2012)] ''Alliance of Women Film Journalists'' (Aug 17, 2021). Retrieved September 22, 2023.</ref></blockquote>
  
 
==Legacy==
 
==Legacy==
 
[[File:Photo694211.jpeg|thumb|400px| Lee Dittman Shapiro 1949-1987 / James T. Lindelof 1957-1987 Marker. Photographed By Devry Becker Jones (CC0), December 4, 2022]]
 
[[File:Photo694211.jpeg|thumb|400px| Lee Dittman Shapiro 1949-1987 / James T. Lindelof 1957-1987 Marker. Photographed By Devry Becker Jones (CC0), December 4, 2022]]
In 1988, both houses of Congress passed a bill recommending that Shapiro and Lindelof, along with journalist Charles Thronton, receive the [[Presidential Medal of Freedom]].<ref>{{cite web |title=H.Con.Res.260 |url=https://www.congress.gov/bill/100th-congress/house-concurrent-resolution/260/actions?r=37&s=1 |access-date=26 July 2022}}</ref>
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In 1988, both houses of Congress passed a bill recommending that Shapiro and Lindelof, along with journalist Charles Thornton, receive the [[Presidential Medal of Freedom]].<ref>[https://www.congress.gov/bill/100th-congress/house-concurrent-resolution/260/actions?r=37&s=1 H.Con.Res.260 — 100th Congress (1987-1988)] ''Congress.gov''. Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref>
 
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A historical marker was installed in the Congressional Cemetery in Washington DC, to commemorate Shapiro and Lindelhof.<ref>[https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=211912 Lee Dittman Shapiro 1949-1987 / James T. Lindelof 1957-1987] ''Historical Marker Database''. Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref>
In 2006 the documentary film ''Shadow of Afghanistan'', by Suzanne Bauman and Jim Burroughs, was released. It incorporated footage originally shot by Shapiro.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20120325080926/http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/348220/Shadow-of-Afghanistan/overview Shadow of Afghanistan], ''[[New York Times]]''</ref>  
 
<blockquote>A wonderful documentary, 20 years in the making, is ''Shadow of Afghanistan''. Lee Shapiro began shooting in 1986 and the film has some of the most startling yet intimate footage ever seen of a country at war. Shapiro and his soundman Jim Lindelof disappeared while filming. The footage was obtained by another filmmaking team who saw it to completion by a skeleton crew's labor of love, not least of whom is editor Mary Ann Skweres' contribution to the entire film cut. Shadow of Afghanistan has already had an Academy qualifying run and is also vying for an Independent Spirit Award nomination."<ref>  
 
Paige Donner, [https://www.huffpost.com/entry/in-honor-of-the-annapolis_b_75142 In Honor of The Annapolis, Md. Middle East Peace Talks: A Short Viewing/Reading List] ''Huffington Post'' (May 25, 2011). Retrieved September 22, 2023.</ref></blockquote>
 
  
<ref>[http://www.nypress.com/article-13401-doc-warriors.html Doc warriors: Suzanne Bauman sheds light on Afghanistan] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100407053039/http://www.nypress.com/article-13401-doc-warriors.html |date=2010-04-07 }}, ''[[New York Press]]'', May 3, 2006</ref><ref>[http://www.moviecitynews.com/awards/2007/critic_awards/awfj.html Shadow of Afghanistan - Suzanne Bauman and Jim Burroughs] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090106033741/http://moviecitynews.com/awards/2007/critic_awards/awfj.html |date=2009-01-06}}, Alliance of Women Film Journalists, "It took 20 years to complete this documentary chronicling developments in Afghanistan, from Eisenhower's 1959 friendly visit, through Soviet invasion and expulsion, the ensuing civil war, to post-9/11 American bombing and occupation. The film uses extraordinary footage, some shot by slain journalist Lee Shapiro, to present the lives of a beleaguered people. (Seen at Tribeca Film Festival)"</ref>
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In 2006 the documentary film ''Shadow of Afghanistan'',<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1521052/ ''Shadow of Afghanistan'' (2006)] ''IMDb''. Retrieved September 23, 2023.</ref> by Suzanne Bauman and Jim Burroughs and incorporating footage originally shot by Shapiro, was released. Close friends of Shapiro, they decided to make a film about Afghanistan in order to pay homage to their friend and allow his footage to be seen:
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<blockquote>A wonderful documentary, 20 years in the making, is ''Shadow of Afghanistan''. Lee Shapiro began shooting in 1986 and the film has some of the most startling yet intimate footage ever seen of a country at war. Shapiro and his soundman Jim Lindelof disappeared while filming. The footage was obtained by another filmmaking team who saw it to completion by a skeleton crew's labor of love, not least of whom is editor Mary Ann Skweres' contribution to the entire film cut. Shadow of Afghanistan has already had an Academy qualifying run and is also vying for an Independent Spirit Award nomination."<ref> Paige Donner, [https://www.huffpost.com/entry/in-honor-of-the-annapolis_b_75142 In Honor of The Annapolis, Md. Middle East Peace Talks: A Short Viewing/Reading List] ''Huffington Post'' (May 25, 2011). Retrieved September 22, 2023.</ref></blockquote>
  
<blockquote>On October 9, 1987, documentary filmmakers Lee Shapiro and James Lindelof were killed during an ambush while making a film about the Mujahideen in Soviet-occupied Afghanistan. Jim Burroughs and Suzanne Bauman have incorporated the footage created by their fallen comrades into a documentary that fits recent, post-September 11 events into a context that stretches all the way back to 1959 and the reign of King Mohammed Zahir Shah. The timeline then moves through Mohammed Daoud Khan's 1973 coup d'état and subsequent assassination, the Soviet invasion of 1979, the exile of five million refugees, the rise of the Taliban in the refugee camps, the assassination of Northern Alliance leader Ahmed Shah Massoud in 2001, the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center just 48 hours later, and the subsequent U.S. bombardment of Afghanistan. Burroughs and Bauman return to Tora Bora, once the turf of the Mujahideen and now home to the recently vacated headquarters of al-Qaeda, and find that the land has not really changed much since Biblical times. Finally, the filmmakers examine present-day Afghanistan under Hamid Karzai. Burroughs and Bauman have created an unusual, emotional, and personal film that weaves together over twenty years of footage shot by them and by Shapiro and Lindelof-including interviews with Russian and Afghan soldiers and never-before-seen footage of al-Qaeda members-into a film about the Afghan people's struggle for self-determination.<ref>[https://tribecafilm.com/films/512cf9cf1c7d76e046001f68-shadow-of-afghanistan Shadow of Afghanistan] ''Tribeca Film Institute''. Retrieved September 22, 2023.</ref></blockquote>
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The film premiered at the [[Tribeca Film Festival]] in 2006, and was updated for DVD release in 2012.<ref name=Merin/> Suzanne Bauman was nominated for an Alliance of Women Film Journalists EDA Female Focus Award, and Bauman and Burroughs won the EDA Special Mention Award for Best of the Fests.
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<blockquote>On October 9, 1987, documentary filmmakers Lee Shapiro and James Lindelof were killed during an ambush while making a film about the Mujahideen in Soviet-occupied Afghanistan. Jim Burroughs and Suzanne Bauman have incorporated the footage created by their fallen comrades into a documentary that fits recent, post-September 11 events into a context that stretches all the way back to 1959 and the reign of King Mohammed Zahir Shah. ... Burroughs and Bauman return to Tora Bora, once the turf of the Mujahideen and now home to the recently vacated headquarters of al-Qaeda, and find that the land has not really changed much since Biblical times. ... Burroughs and Bauman have created an unusual, emotional, and personal film that weaves together over twenty years of footage shot by them and by Shapiro and Lindelof-including interviews with Russian and Afghan soldiers and never-before-seen footage of al-Qaeda members-into a film about the Afghan people's struggle for self-determination.<ref>[https://tribecafilm.com/films/512cf9cf1c7d76e046001f68-shadow-of-afghanistan Shadow of Afghanistan] ''Tribeca Film Institute''. Retrieved September 22, 2023.</ref></blockquote>
  
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Shapiro willingly gave his life to bring the stories of suffering people to the attention of the world. Although he could not complete his work, sacrificing his life in Afghanistan, his footage was finally brought to the public through the efforts of his friends. His wife Linda noted:
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<blockquote>Lee once told me that if he were to die, the best way would be on the front line with the people he was trying to serve. Neither he nor I want others to cry for us, but rather for the people in Afghanistan and Nicaragua, and all those who are miserably suffering under the evils of communism.<ref name=Victoria/></blockquote>
  
<blockquote>In the fall of 1987, cinematographer Lee Shapiro was working with filmmaker James Lindelof on a film about political unrest in Afghanistan when they were caught in the middle of an ambush; both men lost their lives in the attack. Suzanne Bauman and Jim Burroughs were close friends of Shapiro, and they decided to make a film about Afghanistan in order to pay homage to their friend and allow his footage to be seen. Shadow of Afghanistan examines the troubled history of the nation in the 20th century, beginning with Dwight D. Eisenhower's visit to Afghanistan in 1959 on through the 1974 coup d'état, the Soviet occupation of the country, and the later rise of the Taliban, up to America's invasion following the 9/11 terrorist attacks. While documenting the violence that has torn at the nation over the years, Bauman and Burroughs also offer a glimpse of day-to-day life for ordinary Afghan people, visiting military camps, refugee centers, and small communities where folks try to live their lives despite the constant turmoil. Shadow of Afghanistan received its world premiere at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival.<ref>[https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/dvd-shadow-of-afghanistan-suzanne-bauman/11175251 Shadow of Afghanistan] ''Barnes & Noble''. Retrieved July 23, 2023.</ref></blockquote>
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His legacy is not just that their story be told in a beautiful and compelling way, but that his efforts help bring an end to their suffering. President [[Ronald Reagan]], after watching ''Nicaragua Was Our Home'', said of Shapiro that he was "a man of conscience," and that "Your work...is motivated not only by an artist's desire to tell the story and tell it well, but also by your hatred of injustice and your compassion for its victims."<ref name=Victoria/>
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
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==References==
 
==References==
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* Burroughs, Jim, and Suzanne Bauman. ''Shadow of Afghanistan: 1959-2012''. Burbank, CA: Cinema Libre Studio, 2012. {{ASIN|B006XF2QGM}}
 
* Kaplan, Robert D. ''Soldiers of God: With Islamic Warriors in Afghanistan and Pakistan''. New York: Vintage, 2001. {{ASIN|1400030250}}
 
* Kaplan, Robert D. ''Soldiers of God: With Islamic Warriors in Afghanistan and Pakistan''. New York: Vintage, 2001. {{ASIN|1400030250}}
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* Shapiro, Lee. ''Nicaragua Was Our Home''. Chicago, IL: Films Inc., 1985. {{ASIN|B000UWKMP6}}
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
All links retrieved  
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All links retrieved September 23, 2023.
 
* {{IMDb name|1302328|Lee Shapiro}}
 
* {{IMDb name|1302328|Lee Shapiro}}
 
* [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0347654/ Nicaragua Was Our Home (1985)] ''IMDb''
 
* [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0347654/ Nicaragua Was Our Home (1985)] ''IMDb''

Latest revision as of 23:50, 25 September 2023

Lee Shapiro

Lee Shapiro (1949–1987) was an American documentary filmmaker. His one feature-length film, Nicaragua Was Our Home, was released in 1986. It was filmed in Nicaragua among the Miskitos who were then fighting against Nicaraguan government forces.

Shapiro was motivated by his compassion for fellow human beings, and a desire to bring them joy and fulfillment in their lives. When he became aware of intense suffering, he used his skills as a filmmaker to bring the tragedy of those people's lives to the world, hoping to lessen their suffering through public action.

In 1987, Shapiro and fellow filmmaker Jim Lindelof were killed while filming in Afghanistan during the Soviet–Afghan War. Their desire was to bring the suffering of the Afghan people to the attention of the world. While it took a further 20 years for this to happen, their sacrifice for the sake of those unable to tell their own tragic story bore fruit finally due to the efforts of Shapiro's friends.

Life

Lee Dittman Shapiro was born on May 12, 1949 in Oklahoma.

He began his education planning to become a psychiatrist. While attending medical school at the University of Oklahoma he became interested in film and transferred to the London Film School. On his return to the United States, in 1974 he joined the Unification Church, and attended the Unification Theological Seminary (UTS) from 1976-1978.

Lee Shapiro with his wife, Linda

While a student at UTS he was known for performing comedy skits together with another student, Michael Jenkins, to the great delight of students and staff. Jenkins said of him:

Our friendship is one of the most rewarding and endearing relationships of my life. Lee is a very jovial and stable person. He has that rare gift of being able to find a joyful outlook on every activity he is engaged in.[1]

Shapiro filmed the first graduation ceremony at UTS, in 1977. After graduating, he went to make various documentary films for the Unification Church, including "Ocean Challenge" (1980). He continued making films for various organizations, including CAUSA International, an anticommunist organization launched in 1980 that focused on Latin America.

Shapiro married Linda Krout Shapiro on July 1, 1982 at a marriage Blessing Ceremony officiated by Reverend Sun Myung Moon and Hak Ja Han Moon.

Through his work in Latin America, Shapiro witnessed the situation in Nicaragua of the Miskito people and decided to make a documentary film about their suffering:

In Nicaragua, a new side of Lee Shapiro emerged that none of us had seen before: He was willing to live in the jungle and even starve in order to bring the Miskito Indians' situation to the attention of the free world. When he returned, I could see that his drive and his commitment to film making was now turned towards the saving of people and nations. There was a fearlessness about this. We knew he'd lived in great danger, but he never referred to it.[1]

The result was Nicaragua Was Our Home (1985).[2]

Shapiro died in October, 1987, ambushed while filming in Afghanistan.[3]

Nicaragua Was Our Home

Lee Shapiro with Miskito Indian children in Nicaragua, 1985

Nicaragua Was Our Home was filmed in Nicaragua among the Miskitos who were then fighting against Nicaraguan government forces. It features interviews with Miskito Indian people and some non-Miskito clergy who lived among them concerning actions of the government against them, including bombing of villages, shootings, and forced removal of people from their homes.[4]

The film was shown nationally on PBS stations to critical acclaim, and at the 1986 Sundance Film Festival where it was nominated for a Documentary Grand Jury Prize, and at the Chicago International Film Festival where it was nominated for a Gold Hugo award for Best Documentary.[5]

Afghanistan

After completing the film on the Miskitos in Nicaragua, Shapiro became interested in the situation in Afghanistan:

Because there was so little coverage of the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, Lee wanted to get into the heart of the country and bring this tragedy to the world. ... Lee hoped that the film would move the public toward action that could help end the Afghan people's suffering.[1]

Shapiro contacted Aziz Sadat, an Afghan native who had come to the United States as a student in 1979 and had maintained close relations with the Afghan resistance. In September, 1986, Sadat and Shapiro arrived in Peshawar to make contact with Hezb-e Islami Gulbuddin, one of the largest and most militantly fundamentalist Islamic guerrilla groups. After spending two months there, Shapiro returned to the United States.

There he met Jim Lindelof, a paramedic who had previously spent time in Afghanistan with a team providing medical care to rebels in Panjshir Valley. Both Lindelhof and Shapiro were frustrated with the lack of media coverage, and had the idea of shooting a documentary film to raise public awareness. Shapiro had received grant money for the film, and needed an assistant. Lindelhof was the right man for the job. In March 1987 they returned to Afghanistan.[6]

Shapiro and Lindelof spent six months traveling with the Mujahideen, documenting the plight of the Afghan people under Soviet occupation. However, before they could complete filming, they were ambushed and killed outside Kabul:

The campaign to target foreign journalists had more tragic results. Two American filmmakers, Lee Shapiro and Jim Lindelof, were apparently killed by a regime attack while traveling with the mujahidin. In 1986, Lindelof had been named paramedic of the year for his efforts training Afghan medical workers. In response to protests, Kabul stated it could not "guarantee the security of foreign subjects" who enter illegally, whose presence it views as "evidence" of "external interference."[7]

The armed group they were traveling with reported that they had been ambushed by military forces of the Soviet Union or the Afghan government. However, the details have been questioned, partly because of the poor reputation of the group's leader, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar:

Two American journalists are believed dead in northwest Afghanistan, diplomatic and resistance forces say here. Filmmaker Lee Shapiro and his soundman, Jim Lindalos, both of New York, were killed Oct. 11, reportedly in a Soviet or Afghan government ambush, according to United States consular officials. However, the resistance group that accompanied the film team has a poor reputation among most informed observers, and doubts have arisen over whether the two Americans did indeed die in an Afghan government or Soviet attack.[8]

Details of the incident remained unclear, even the exact date of their deaths was not ascertained, with some reports stating October 9 and others October 11. Their bodies were never recovered:

Filmmaker Lee Shapiro, who set out to show what horrors were being inflicted upon Afghanistan and its people during the Soviet invasion, remained in the country after he and other journalists were warned that they were in grave danger. While traveling to find and interview one of Afghanistan’s moderate leaders in his rural headquarters, Shapiro and his cameraman, Jim Lindelof, disappeared. They were reportedly caught in a fire fight between Soviet troops and the Mujaheddin. While their deaths were announced, their bodies were never found.[9]

Legacy

Lee Dittman Shapiro 1949-1987 / James T. Lindelof 1957-1987 Marker. Photographed By Devry Becker Jones (CC0), December 4, 2022

In 1988, both houses of Congress passed a bill recommending that Shapiro and Lindelof, along with journalist Charles Thornton, receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom.[10] A historical marker was installed in the Congressional Cemetery in Washington DC, to commemorate Shapiro and Lindelhof.[11]

In 2006 the documentary film Shadow of Afghanistan,[12] by Suzanne Bauman and Jim Burroughs and incorporating footage originally shot by Shapiro, was released. Close friends of Shapiro, they decided to make a film about Afghanistan in order to pay homage to their friend and allow his footage to be seen:

A wonderful documentary, 20 years in the making, is Shadow of Afghanistan. Lee Shapiro began shooting in 1986 and the film has some of the most startling yet intimate footage ever seen of a country at war. Shapiro and his soundman Jim Lindelof disappeared while filming. The footage was obtained by another filmmaking team who saw it to completion by a skeleton crew's labor of love, not least of whom is editor Mary Ann Skweres' contribution to the entire film cut. Shadow of Afghanistan has already had an Academy qualifying run and is also vying for an Independent Spirit Award nomination."[13]

The film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2006, and was updated for DVD release in 2012.[9] Suzanne Bauman was nominated for an Alliance of Women Film Journalists EDA Female Focus Award, and Bauman and Burroughs won the EDA Special Mention Award for Best of the Fests.

On October 9, 1987, documentary filmmakers Lee Shapiro and James Lindelof were killed during an ambush while making a film about the Mujahideen in Soviet-occupied Afghanistan. Jim Burroughs and Suzanne Bauman have incorporated the footage created by their fallen comrades into a documentary that fits recent, post-September 11 events into a context that stretches all the way back to 1959 and the reign of King Mohammed Zahir Shah. ... Burroughs and Bauman return to Tora Bora, once the turf of the Mujahideen and now home to the recently vacated headquarters of al-Qaeda, and find that the land has not really changed much since Biblical times. ... Burroughs and Bauman have created an unusual, emotional, and personal film that weaves together over twenty years of footage shot by them and by Shapiro and Lindelof-including interviews with Russian and Afghan soldiers and never-before-seen footage of al-Qaeda members-into a film about the Afghan people's struggle for self-determination.[14]

Shapiro willingly gave his life to bring the stories of suffering people to the attention of the world. Although he could not complete his work, sacrificing his life in Afghanistan, his footage was finally brought to the public through the efforts of his friends. His wife Linda noted:

Lee once told me that if he were to die, the best way would be on the front line with the people he was trying to serve. Neither he nor I want others to cry for us, but rather for the people in Afghanistan and Nicaragua, and all those who are miserably suffering under the evils of communism.[1]

His legacy is not just that their story be told in a beautiful and compelling way, but that his efforts help bring an end to their suffering. President Ronald Reagan, after watching Nicaragua Was Our Home, said of Shapiro that he was "a man of conscience," and that "Your work...is motivated not only by an artist's desire to tell the story and tell it well, but also by your hatred of injustice and your compassion for its victims."[1]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Victoria Clevenger, Lee Dittman Shapiro TParents.org, December 1987. Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  2. Nicaragua Was Our Home IMDb. Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  3. William G. Blair, 2 Americans Reported Killed In an Ambush in Afghanistan The New York Times (October 28, 1987). Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  4. John Corry, On 13, Sandinistas vs. Miskitos, The New York Times (July 29, 1986). Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  5. Nicaragua Was Our Home Awards IMDb. Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  6. Nikki Finke, Under Fire: An Afghan Odyssey : California Medical Technician and New Jersey Film Maker Give Their Lives Telling Story of Rebels Los Angeles Times (October 30, 1987). Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  7. Craig Karp, Afghanistan: eight years of Soviet occupation Department of State Bulletin 88(2132) (March 1988). Retrieved September 22, 2023.
  8. Edward Girardet, Two US journalists reported killed in Afghanistan; details murky Christian Science Monitor (October 28, 1987). Retrieved September 22, 2023.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Jennifer Merin, Documentary Retroview: Shadow of Afghanistan 1959-2012 (2006, 2012) Alliance of Women Film Journalists (Aug 17, 2021). Retrieved September 22, 2023.
  10. H.Con.Res.260 — 100th Congress (1987-1988) Congress.gov. Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  11. Lee Dittman Shapiro 1949-1987 / James T. Lindelof 1957-1987 Historical Marker Database. Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  12. Shadow of Afghanistan (2006) IMDb. Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  13. Paige Donner, In Honor of The Annapolis, Md. Middle East Peace Talks: A Short Viewing/Reading List Huffington Post (May 25, 2011). Retrieved September 22, 2023.
  14. Shadow of Afghanistan Tribeca Film Institute. Retrieved September 22, 2023.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Burroughs, Jim, and Suzanne Bauman. Shadow of Afghanistan: 1959-2012. Burbank, CA: Cinema Libre Studio, 2012. ASIN B006XF2QGM
  • Kaplan, Robert D. Soldiers of God: With Islamic Warriors in Afghanistan and Pakistan. New York: Vintage, 2001. ASIN 1400030250
  • Shapiro, Lee. Nicaragua Was Our Home. Chicago, IL: Films Inc., 1985. ASIN B000UWKMP6

External links

All links retrieved September 23, 2023.


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