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Home / Arts and Entertainment / Saddam's Cake: A Child's Struggle Under Dictatorship

Saddam's Cake: A Child's Struggle Under Dictatorship

4 Feb

•

Summary

  • Children baked cakes for Saddam during dire 1990s sanctions.
  • A film depicts a girl's quest for scarce cake ingredients.
  • Dictatorship's impact on human nature is a film theme.
Saddam's Cake: A Child's Struggle Under Dictatorship

During the 1990s, Iraqis endured crippling UN sanctions, making basic ingredients like eggs and sugar scarce. Yet, dictator Saddam Hussein's birthday on April 28 was marked by forced celebrations, including children baking cakes for him.

Iraqi director Hasan Hadi's award-winning film, "The President's Cake," draws on these memories. It follows nine-year-old Lamia, who braves the dangers of the marshlands to find these precious, unaffordable ingredients. The film, now gaining international acclaim, also examines the profound psychological impact of living under authoritarian rule.

Hadi, who experienced firsthand the contradictions of his homeland, recalls the tragic fate of a classmate expelled and conscripted for failing to bake a cake. This personal history fuels the film's exploration of how dictatorships destroy freedom and warp human nature, leaving lasting scars long after their demise.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
In the 1990s, Saddam Hussein's birthday on April 28 was a day of forced celebration in Iraq, with staged parties and propaganda, despite severe UN sanctions.
The film 'The President's Cake' follows a nine-year-old girl named Lamia who must find scarce ingredients to bake a cake for Saddam Hussein to avoid punishment.
According to Hasan Hadi, dictatorship not only destroys freedom of speech but also forces people to lie, be hypocritical, and deceitful, with effects that last long after the regime ends.

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