Hadh Kar Di Aapne is essential viewing for anyone interested in African cinema, post-colonial melodrama, or simply a devastating story of betrayal and sorrow. Yes, the pacing stumbles, and the missing footage is a tragedy. But the emotional core—Fartun Iman’s eyes as she realizes she destroyed the man she loved based on a lie—will haunt you for days.
Jama orchestrates a devastating lie: he forges a letter claiming Cismaan was responsible for Shukri’s husband’s death. Shukri, bound by xeer (customary honor), breaks the engagement and publicly shames Cismaan. The film’s title— Hadh Kar Di Aapne —is the searing accusation Shukri hurls at Cismaan during their final confrontation. hadh kar di aapne af somali
This review examines the film’s plot, cultural impact, cinematography, and its place in Somali cinematic history. Director: Abdikadir Ahmed Said (Jawari) Language: Somali Genre: Melodrama / Family Tragedy Runtime: Approx. 2 hours Introduction: A Lost Classic Rediscovered In the early 1990s, as Somalia’s civil war intensified and the national film industry collapsed, one film stood as a final, defiant artistic statement. Hadh Kar Di Aapne (“You Have Done Me Wrong”) is widely considered the last major feature film produced in Mogadishu before the destruction of the Somali Film Agency’s archives. For decades, only faded VHS copies survived in diaspora homes. But thanks to recent restoration efforts by the Somali Film Revival Project, this masterpiece is finally receiving the recognition it deserves. Plot Summary (No Major Spoilers) The story centers on Shukri (played by Fartun Iman ), a young widow in Mogadishu struggling to raise her two children after her husband dies mysteriously at sea. She falls in love with Cismaan ( Yusuf Axmed ), a kind-hearted merchant. However, Cismaan’s jealous younger brother, Jama ( Hassan Aden ), secretly desires Shukri. Hadh Kar Di Aapne is essential viewing for
The Somali Film Revival Project streams a restored version (subtitled in English and Arabic) on their Vimeo channel. Proceeds support preserving other lost Somali films. “Hadh kar di aapne, Cismaan. Hadh kar di aapne.” You have done me wrong. You have done me wrong. And in the end, the wrong was not his—it was all of ours for letting this cinema nearly disappear. Jama orchestrates a devastating lie: he forges a