‘Like a prisoner told he is free’ - the real life story behind Spielberg’s film THE TERMINAL
I just got through seeing the new TOM HANKS movie THE TERMINAL.
Thought some others would find this interesting.
I originally heard of Merhan Karimi Nasseri on a CBS news interview many, many years ago. Due to some bad circumstances, he was living in Charles de Gaulle airport.
Merhan Karimi Nasseri has waited patiently in Charles de Gaulle airport, sleeping on a red plastic bench, for the past 11 years, hoping for official political refugee status. Now, the 54 year old Iranian native can leave his airport home, if he wants to. Belgium has granted him refugee credentials. ‘‘We are very pleased for him,’’ said Dominique Deladrier, the Belgian consul in Paris. ‘‘If we had known the extent of his dilemma earlier, we could have straightened this out a long time ago.’’
Irish Examiner - World News - July 14, 1999
There were some definite spiritual questions I thought of in my own life.
- Am I ’stuck in a terminal?’ in my own life?
- Am I too afraid to make it ouside?
- Do I fear the unknown life outside of the comfortable area I have now?
- Where am I going?
- Whom do I want to be associated with? (In the movie, Tom Hanks character has to declare his nationality.)
P.S.
Jazz saxophonist Benny Golson is in the film
Something in B Flat - Benny Golson Itunes link
Tags: News and Media
