My all-time favourite film is "Lawrence Of Arabia" and, if I have a
favourite scene from the movie, then I guess it is the one of Lawrence's
triumphal return from the Nefud desert, having gone back to rescue the
Arab Gasim. The crossing of the Nefud desert is considered impossible,
even by the local Arabs, but Lawrence persuades them that, in this way,
they can take the Turkish port at Aqaba from the rear.
Having carried out the superhuman feat of traversing this furnace, it is
discovered that one of the Arabs, Gasim, has fallen off his camel and
is no doubt dying somewhere back in the desert. Lawrence is told that
any idea of rescue is futile and, in any event, Gasim's death is
"written". When Lawrence achieves the impossible and returns with Gasim
still alive, Sherif Ali admits to him: "Truly, for some men nothing is
written unless they write it".
As an impressionable teenager when this film was first released, I was
stunned by Lawrence's courage and unselfishness in going back into the
hell of the Nefud to attempt to find a man he hardly knew among the vast
expanse of a fiery terrain and I was so moved by the sense of purpose
of a man who is determined to take nothing as "written" but to shape his
own destiny. This sense of anti-determinism and this belief that
anything is possible has stayed with me always and continues to inspire
me in small ways and large.
Author: Roger Darlington
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