Festivals: call for entries

Reception of applications for Kazan International Muslim Film Festival is still in progress

 

On February 1, submission for the XX Kazan International Muslim Film Festival started. The submission will last till June 1, 2024. The Selection Committee will finish its work by the beginning of July. After this, the official selection will be announced.

Read more...
 

ALTERNATIVA FILM PROJECT call for entries: Development Lab

 

Deadline: 28.04.2024

Bukhara, Almaty and online, June-October 2024

Read more...
 

Kyrgyz Serial: The contest of scripts (2024_kg)
 
Read more...
 
Wednesday, 15 June 2016 00:00

Premiere of the documentary "Safed Bulan"

 

It will be on the June 16, 2016 at 4 pm in Dom Kino, Bishkek, Logvinenko, 13, free admission

 

Kyrgyzfilm production, 2016, director Baiysh Ismanov.

 

Safed-Bulan (Ala-Buka district, Jalal-Abad region, Kyrgyzstan) is a small village and an archaeoligical reserve that is considered sacred for Muslims. The village is in an area in the north-western part of the Fergana Valley where the borders of Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Tadjikistan meet. The settlement is at least one thousand years old and is mentioned in medieval, Arabic and Persian scriptures under the name Isbid Bulan.

 

The hamlet of Safed-Bulan, located near the village of Ala-Buka at the junction of the Padisha Ata and the Chanach-Sairivers, is named after Bulan (woman), a black African maiden. According to legend, Bulan came to the lands of Central Asia with the army of Arabic warriors led by her beloved and, perhaps, her master - Shah-Jarir (grandson of Prophet Mohamad).

 

Apparently this wave of the Muslim conquests was a successful one, since historical sources tell that the local tribal inhabitants "pretended to accept" a new religion of Islam.

 

According to the legend, the locals attacked while the Arabs had laid down their weapons for their Friday prayers. While some warriors were able to flee, many defenseless Arabs were beheaded on the spot.

 

Bulan unsuccessfully searched for her lover who, it is believed, had fled back to Arabia. Though everyone was prohibited from burying the dead, Bulan gathered the 2700 heads of the decapitated Arabs, washed them of blood in the river and buried them all. She was blessed for her deed by becoming completely white all over. Hence the name: Safed (or safid) Bulan (or Bulon) (White Woman). Some historians believe that Safed Bulan's hair turned white due to the shock she had experienced witnessing the massacre.

 

When Safed Bulan died, she was buried near the slain Arab warriors. Her grave became a place of piligrimage, or a mazar (Arabic for holy mausoleum). Kirin mechet, the place where the warriors were beheaded, stands nearby on the left. According to the legend, the rock that stands at the mazar's entry marks the exact spot where Safed Bulan washed the heads of the warriors.

 

Women visit the mausoleum to pray and ask for Safed-Bulan's blessings. Those who have a hard time conceiving children visit in order to touch the "fertility rock" that lies in the small yard of the mausoleum.

 

In 2002, the U.S. Embassy in Kyrgyzstan funded a restoration of the mausoleum.

"The tale of Safed Bulan" (Сафед Булон қиссаси), a literary document written by Shah Khakim Halisa in 1811, is a historical resource that offers information on various mazars of Central Asia.

 

 

Own.inf.