An Argileh Session in Cairo
[Episode 4: Prologue: The Narrator] (The scene opens on a 1942 map of Egypt, the ink lines stark against the yellowed paper. The Narrator steps into the frame, his voice warm and conversational, yet carrying the heavy weight of hindsight.) "Good evening. Tonight, we introduce a young man who will one day stand on the world stage, a man whose journey from radical firebrand to peacemaker is one of the great ironies of the 20th century. We meet Anwar Sadat. Not, however, the statesman who shook hands with those he once called enemies. No, we meet the young lieutenant, a man burning with a fierce, almost naive, nationalism. In the early 1940s, Sadat was a man of contradictions. He was an enthusiastic, perhaps even desperate, believer that the Axis powers could liberate Egypt from British rule. He saw Rommel not as a conqueror, but as a liberator. He was willing to ally with the very forces that would later be his ideological enemies, driven by a singular, blinding goal: independence. ...