<p>The wall of a house in Torokorobougou, a district in the Malian capital Bamako, suddenly lights up as a black-and-white film starts to roll.</p>.<p>The audience falls silent as the title of the documentary, <em>Sigui</em>, flashes up on the screen.</p>.<p>It's one of French director Jean Rouch's seminal films, charting a secret ceremony of central Mali's Dogon ethnic group which is held once every 60 years.</p>.<p>Rouch, who died aged 86 in a road accident in Niger, is the only person to have ever recorded it.</p>.<p>He shot around 140 films over his long career, including many in West Africa and particularly the Sahel state of Niger.</p>.<p>While his work has faced criticism for reflecting the condescending colonial attitudes of the time, the film-maker-cum-ethnographer was a prime mover in the Sahel's cinematic tradition and a champion of local directors.</p>.<p>But memories of Rouch's work are fading, while the once-flourishing movie scene in the semi-arid African region has been battered by a lack of funding.</p>.<p>"He is the grandfather of cinema in Niger," said Moussa Hamidou, the country's first sound producer, who worked on all of Rouch's films.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/islamic-state-claims-responsibility-for-killing-33-malian-soldiers-964718.html" target="_blank">Islamic State claims responsibility for killing 33 Malian soldiers</a></strong></p>.<p>The Frenchman gave many of Niger's prominent cultural figures their start such as director Oumarou Ganda who in 1969 became the first African to present a film at the Cannes festival.</p>.<p>Hamidou talks cheerfully in his home in Niger's capital Niamey about the artistic milieu that once thrived in the city.</p>.<p>"It was a good time for West Africa," he said, explaining that directors had access to funding.</p>.<p>But the Sahel's cinematic heyday of the 60s and 70s is a now distant memory, with funding having mostly dried up.</p>.<p>Governments across the Sahel are more focused on combatting the brutal jihadist insurgency, which first emerged in 2012, than cultural pursuits.</p>.<p>In Niamey, film enthusiasts have to rummage through the archives of the Institute for Human Sciences Research (IRSH) to find traces of this cultural golden age.</p>.<p>Rouch himself directed the institute between 1959 and 1969, where many of his old film reels are stored.</p>.<p>One, for example, is his famed <em>Cock-a-Doodle-Doo! Mr Chicken</em>, a comedy about a chicken salesman travelling Niger in his Citroen 2 CV.</p>.<p>Seyni Moumouni, current director of the IRSH, said few are interested in the reels.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/dozens-killed-in-niger-attacks-near-mali-border-962903.html" target="_blank">Dozens killed in Niger attacks near Mali border</a></strong></p>.<p>"They're gathering dust because young people now prefer cassettes and DVDs," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Despite his successes, Rouch also came in for fierce criticism for his depictions of African traditions, which many saw as exoticising and patronising.</p>.<p>"You look at us like insects," Senegalese film-maker Ousmane Sembene told him in 1965.</p>.<p>Rouch responded that he was "trapped between two colliding worlds", referring to his native France, and the Sahel countries it colonised.</p>.<p>A film expert in Mali's capital Bamako, who declined to be named, recognised that Rouch helped local film-makers, but said he was still a "product of his time".</p>.<p>However, Malian director Cheick Oumar Sissoko argued Rouch had made an important contribution simply by capturing what he did on film.</p>.<p>"The image itself is an extraordinary language which constitutes memory," Sissoko said.</p>.<p>At the film screening in Bamako, ethnic Dogons in attendance watched in awe.</p>.<p>The Sigui ceremony celebrates the regeneration of the life cycle and is one of the most important events in the Dogon calendar.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/mali-court-ends-trial-of-former-coup-leader-sanogo-962281.html" target="_blank">Mali court ends trial of former coup leader Sanogo</a></strong></p>.<p>Festivities involving elaborate masks last for years. But the 60-year span between each Sigui meant that few in the audience had seen the ceremony themselves.</p>.<p>None said they had seen Rouch's film before either, a sign of his dwindling cachet.</p>.<p>Ali Dolo, a mayor from central Mali who fled to Bamako because of the conflict, cried out in recognition during one scene.</p>.<p>"That's my home," he said, telling <em>AFP</em> later that not much had changed since Rouch filmed it.</p>.<p>But for many, what has changed is the conflict, and a sudden lack of cultural funding.</p>.<p>"It's impossible to make films without help," said Djingarey Maiga, a Malian-Nigerien director.</p>.<p>He reflected on a time when Sahel directors would gather in a studio in the Musee de l'Homme, in Paris, which Rouch and other ethnographers had set aside for them.</p>.<p>"We film-makers from Niger and Africa used to go there to edit and mix our films," he said.</p>
<p>The wall of a house in Torokorobougou, a district in the Malian capital Bamako, suddenly lights up as a black-and-white film starts to roll.</p>.<p>The audience falls silent as the title of the documentary, <em>Sigui</em>, flashes up on the screen.</p>.<p>It's one of French director Jean Rouch's seminal films, charting a secret ceremony of central Mali's Dogon ethnic group which is held once every 60 years.</p>.<p>Rouch, who died aged 86 in a road accident in Niger, is the only person to have ever recorded it.</p>.<p>He shot around 140 films over his long career, including many in West Africa and particularly the Sahel state of Niger.</p>.<p>While his work has faced criticism for reflecting the condescending colonial attitudes of the time, the film-maker-cum-ethnographer was a prime mover in the Sahel's cinematic tradition and a champion of local directors.</p>.<p>But memories of Rouch's work are fading, while the once-flourishing movie scene in the semi-arid African region has been battered by a lack of funding.</p>.<p>"He is the grandfather of cinema in Niger," said Moussa Hamidou, the country's first sound producer, who worked on all of Rouch's films.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/islamic-state-claims-responsibility-for-killing-33-malian-soldiers-964718.html" target="_blank">Islamic State claims responsibility for killing 33 Malian soldiers</a></strong></p>.<p>The Frenchman gave many of Niger's prominent cultural figures their start such as director Oumarou Ganda who in 1969 became the first African to present a film at the Cannes festival.</p>.<p>Hamidou talks cheerfully in his home in Niger's capital Niamey about the artistic milieu that once thrived in the city.</p>.<p>"It was a good time for West Africa," he said, explaining that directors had access to funding.</p>.<p>But the Sahel's cinematic heyday of the 60s and 70s is a now distant memory, with funding having mostly dried up.</p>.<p>Governments across the Sahel are more focused on combatting the brutal jihadist insurgency, which first emerged in 2012, than cultural pursuits.</p>.<p>In Niamey, film enthusiasts have to rummage through the archives of the Institute for Human Sciences Research (IRSH) to find traces of this cultural golden age.</p>.<p>Rouch himself directed the institute between 1959 and 1969, where many of his old film reels are stored.</p>.<p>One, for example, is his famed <em>Cock-a-Doodle-Doo! Mr Chicken</em>, a comedy about a chicken salesman travelling Niger in his Citroen 2 CV.</p>.<p>Seyni Moumouni, current director of the IRSH, said few are interested in the reels.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/dozens-killed-in-niger-attacks-near-mali-border-962903.html" target="_blank">Dozens killed in Niger attacks near Mali border</a></strong></p>.<p>"They're gathering dust because young people now prefer cassettes and DVDs," he told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Despite his successes, Rouch also came in for fierce criticism for his depictions of African traditions, which many saw as exoticising and patronising.</p>.<p>"You look at us like insects," Senegalese film-maker Ousmane Sembene told him in 1965.</p>.<p>Rouch responded that he was "trapped between two colliding worlds", referring to his native France, and the Sahel countries it colonised.</p>.<p>A film expert in Mali's capital Bamako, who declined to be named, recognised that Rouch helped local film-makers, but said he was still a "product of his time".</p>.<p>However, Malian director Cheick Oumar Sissoko argued Rouch had made an important contribution simply by capturing what he did on film.</p>.<p>"The image itself is an extraordinary language which constitutes memory," Sissoko said.</p>.<p>At the film screening in Bamako, ethnic Dogons in attendance watched in awe.</p>.<p>The Sigui ceremony celebrates the regeneration of the life cycle and is one of the most important events in the Dogon calendar.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/mali-court-ends-trial-of-former-coup-leader-sanogo-962281.html" target="_blank">Mali court ends trial of former coup leader Sanogo</a></strong></p>.<p>Festivities involving elaborate masks last for years. But the 60-year span between each Sigui meant that few in the audience had seen the ceremony themselves.</p>.<p>None said they had seen Rouch's film before either, a sign of his dwindling cachet.</p>.<p>Ali Dolo, a mayor from central Mali who fled to Bamako because of the conflict, cried out in recognition during one scene.</p>.<p>"That's my home," he said, telling <em>AFP</em> later that not much had changed since Rouch filmed it.</p>.<p>But for many, what has changed is the conflict, and a sudden lack of cultural funding.</p>.<p>"It's impossible to make films without help," said Djingarey Maiga, a Malian-Nigerien director.</p>.<p>He reflected on a time when Sahel directors would gather in a studio in the Musee de l'Homme, in Paris, which Rouch and other ethnographers had set aside for them.</p>.<p>"We film-makers from Niger and Africa used to go there to edit and mix our films," he said.</p>