“Cruelty is never accidental: it is the most lucid act of man.”
— Albert Camus
The film by Kaouther Ben Hania offers no catharsis. It accompanies the viewer relentlessly. The Voice of Hind Rajab escapes the logic of spectacle and reduces everything to the essentials: a Red Crescent control room, voices chasing one another, unanswered waits. In this radical stripping away emerges the true core of the work: not the depiction of violence, but the impossibility of giving it form.
Hind, the girl, never appears on screen. She remains a voice, an incorporeal invocation, a presence that eludes visual capture. In this enforced absence, the film raises a crucial question: how to bear witness to horror without turning it into consumption, and how to transmit memory without reducing it to the pornography of suffering. Ben Hania chooses subtraction, and in this gesture signals that cinema cannot “show” the unspeakable; it can only allow the interval, the void, the horror, to emerge.
The work occupies an ethical space: it does not give voice to a victim, but compels us to listen to the voice that already exists, the one that is deliberately kept from silence. It is not merely about evoking emotion, but about confronting a failure that concerns us all. Hind is not just a proper name; she is the symbol of a long genealogy of atrocities that we cannot comprehend and will never justify.
To this failure is added the most exhausting aspect: time passing in the operations room, measured by bureaucratic procedures and the wait for a permit, the so-called “green line” of coordination, without which the rescue cannot proceed. Even when the go-ahead arrives, the brutal logic of war nullifies all rules: the ambulance attempting the rescue is struck, the rescuers die, all of them. In this tragic short-circuit, the nakedness of destructive power is revealed, capable of annihilating even those who observe precautions and follow procedure.
In this sense, the film/documentary functions as a device of memory and resistance: it refuses oblivion and forces one to dwell in that unacceptable instant when aid does not arrive. No catharsis, no redemption — only the unbearable weight of absurdity.
The Voice of Hind Rajab demonstrates, with implacable lucidity, that cinema can still bear witness, not only to the factual truth — which remains often partial, elusive, incomprehensible — but to our inability to confront it. If “after Auschwitz, poetry can never be the same,” we can bear witness to this war in the same way. Here, cinema becomes a spokesperson, an indispensable instrument, evidence of its own legitimacy in the face of horror. And here the image resists not by offering much to vision, but by withholding, allowing glimpses of what cannot truly be endured. Ben Hania operates in this critical space, which is also political, close to what is defined as the “aesthetic regime of images”: a place where the work does not sweeten reality but lays it bare, imposing on the viewer the burden of thought and the impossibility of omission.
“Suffering asks to be told, but almost always remains mute.”
— Susan Sontag