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Bushra Al Fusail is a young photographer living in Sana’a, the capital of Yemen. The city has been under siege for weeks now, ever since the civil war swelled into a geopolitical conflict involving Iran and Saudi Arabia.

It is said that Iran backs the Houthi rebels who ousted the president just months ago. Saudi Arabia, for its part, is responding with air strikes against the rebels. Now that the rebels have reached the capital, it is the civilian population that has been hard hit.

Food is rationed, the price of gasoline has gone through the roof, initiatives for peace talks are continually sabotaged, and journalists have fled the country. As a result, news from Yemen is scarce, images few, and footage of everyday life non-existent.

These fleeting moments of freedom caused an uproar in Yemen

Against this backdrop, I present the short film Biking for Yemen. Now that driving has become so expensive, men often use bicycles. Bushra Al Fusail’s idea for Yemeni women: Let’s ride bicycles, too!

Using Facebook, she invited 80 women to come for a bike riding lesson followed by a ride through the streets of the capital city. Bushra took pictures and filmed the event, and posted the footage on Facebook as Bike4Yemen.

Nina Aqlan and Bushra Al Faisal

Nina Aqlan and Bushra Al Faisal

These fleeting moments of freedom caused an uproar in the country. Bike4Yemen swiftly became a political issue, and participants feared their identities would be made known. News of the initiative spread. From New York to Cairo, from Australia to Paris, solidarity bike rides were organized.

It means welcome support for Bushra, now that she has come under fire in her conservative homeland. And it strengthens her conviction that the best time to challenge the prevailing culture is during wartime.

The idea for the film came from Nina Aqlan, a young woman who got out of Sana’a in May on the last flight before the airport was

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