<span>Last week, Maythem Ridha's </span><span><em>Ali and His Miracle Sheep</em></span><span> won the Best Film in the UK Competition at the Sheffield DocFest</span><span>, which took place as a hybrid event </span><span>this year. Similarly, the film is also a hybrid, with the director having mixed reality with fiction to make it. </span> <span>The stunning 26-minute documentary follows a </span><span>nine-year-old mute boy named Ali</span><span> as he </span><span>leads his favourite sheep, Kirmeta, to </span><span>sacrifice. He embarks upon a strenuous 400-kilometre journey</span><span> in which he bears witness to the beauty, and</span><span> the ills, of Iraq. </span> <span>It's the latest instalment of</span><span> Iraqi Tales, an anthology of films that Ridha has been putting together since the early 2000s, while </span><span>a student at the</span><span> University of Oxford and the UK's prestigious National Film and Television School.</span> <span>Ridha was born in Iraq, but his family were forced to flee in 1979, and his father took up a post-doctoral position at Southampton University, after</span><span> the torture and deaths of three of the director's uncles under the Saddam Hussein regime. </span> <span>After the fall of Saddam, Ridha started to return to Iraq, filming and taking photographs whenever he was there. "The country had changed dramatically," he </span><span>tells </span><span><em>The National</em></span><span>. "When we left Iraq, it was a very affluent, highly literate nation." </span> <span>But Ridha was </span><span>worried about</span><span> the media's perception of </span><span>his birthplace. </span> <span>"The media was very focus</span><span>ed, after 2003, on the war," he says. "But to me, there's another Iraq, which sort of lives beyond these walls and tragedies. These are stories about Iraqis </span><span>that look at the people on a much more personal and human level. So I kind of took a vow to go back every year and tell a story somehow." </span> <span>Other films that he has made as part of the Iraqi Tales anthology include </span><span><em>Drifting on the Wind </em></span><span>(2003), which is about an Iraqi exile invited to return to Baghdad, which leads to traumatic,</span><span> </span><span>compartmentalised memories being reignited. </span> <span>The best known film in the series is the multi-award-winning </span><span><em>Al-Baghdadi</em></span><span> (2007). It's about a </span><span>nine-year-old boy who arrives in Britain unable to speak English, and is </span><span>shunned by those around him. It's</span><span> a story inspired by what happened to the director when he first moved to </span><span>England.</span> <span><em>Ali and </em></span><span><em>His Miracle Sheep</em></span><span> begins with a tale </span><span>told through intertitles presented over </span><span>children's drawings. The words on screen recount the </span><span>story of Imam Husayn</span><span>, who </span><span>was killed during the Battle of Karbala</span><span> 14 centuries ago. </span> <span>The battle is celebrated every year with a pilgrimage, during which</span><span> millions of people walk hundreds of kilometres through the Iraqi desert road to Karbala to</span><span> re-enact</span><span> the battle, mourn</span><span> and </span><span>sacrifice animals to feed the hungry. </span> <span>The film was also born from the director’s personal experiences. </span> <span>"My grandmother used to take me to all these different shrines," he says. "I spent my childhood travelling around with her. There are so many stories of a prophet or a good saint it kind of became imbibed in our collective psyche. These became our superheroes, like kids today have Spider-M</span><span>an, and so we would play characters from the stories." </span> <span>In the opening scene,</span><span> a mother is mourning the death of her son. It's then revealed that in 2016,</span><span> he went to fight against ISIS, never to return, leaving his son, Ali, behind</span><span>. Before going, he had promised Ali that they would go on the pilgrimage walk and sacrifice a sheep when he returned from war. Traumatised by not seeing his father again, Ali stopped speaking. He decides to make the journey in memory of his father. </span> <span>In 2018, while Ridha was on a trip to Iraq, he came up with the idea for</span><span> </span><span><em>Ali and His </em></span><span><em>Miracle Sheep</em></span><span>. "I came across a lot of kids taking sacrificial offerings, sheep, cows," he says. "There was even one family taking a camel to slaughter at the shrine." </span> <span>The scene also brought to mind a character </span><span>he had written about 15 years previously</span><span>. "It was a secondary character in a longer drama piece – a mute boy who had been traumatised because of the loss of his father. Also, at the time, a lot of Iraqis were fighting ISIS, so I combined these ideas to make the film." </span> <span>This idea of a story coming to him seems like a strange assertion because, in general, documentaries are something directors find in reality, not something they </span><span>orchestrate</span><span> or script</span><span>.</span> <span>"Initially, the idea was to create almost a half-drama, half-documentary hybrid," he explains. "But then we eliminated some of the drama elements because of the realities of filming in Iraq, but</span><span> the reality became far more interesting." </span> <span>Most important was finding Ali. </span> <span>"The boy had lost his dad a year and a half earlier. So he was traumatised, clearly," Ridha says.<span><strong> </strong></span> I bought the boy a sheep and let him bond and create a relationship with it. Then I said, 'We are going to go on a long walk and then sacrifice the sheep for your father. How do you feel about that?' He </span><span>was OK with it</span><span>, and that became the element</span><span> that drove the story. </span> <span>While this opens up the work to criticism, Ridha sees </span><span>it differently. </span> <span>"It was clear to me that </span><span>having still not sacrificed anything for his late father … </span><span>this was going to be a healing journey for him and I recognised it </span><span>from the excited look on his face that he felt something similar in his own childlike way, as if this journey was </span><span>something </span><span>he had</span><span> been waiting to do for a long time</span><span>," he says.</span> <span>"Most of the stuff on that journey was discovered</span><span>. </span><span>You find something and then you create some kind of scene or story device around it." </span> <span>Winning the award at Sheffield has already sparked change for Ridha</span><span>. "I've been getting a lot of calls, some from the Middle East, offering to direct projects."</span> <span>It's certainly an exciting time for the director, who is reaping the rewards</span><span> of bringing alternative, more human stories from </span><span>the region to the rest of the world.</span>