The Japan Times - Impact of Israeli-Palestinian conflict plays out on screen in Berlin

EUR -
AED 4.286508
AFN 72.984916
ALL 95.285241
AMD 430.366477
ANG 2.089468
AOA 1071.306459
ARS 1624.159398
AUD 1.615887
AWG 2.103519
AZN 1.989975
BAM 1.949686
BBD 2.350918
BDT 143.280105
BGN 1.948798
BHD 0.440307
BIF 3471.826957
BMD 1.167001
BND 1.486208
BOB 8.065605
BRL 5.840607
BSD 1.167235
BTN 111.83991
BWP 16.440237
BYN 3.260991
BYR 22873.212895
BZD 2.347479
CAD 1.601767
CDF 2619.916164
CHF 0.914695
CLF 0.026532
CLP 1044.236588
CNY 7.918274
CNH 7.919406
COP 4422.617403
CRC 530.41633
CUC 1.167001
CUP 30.925517
CVE 110.516107
CZK 24.310136
DJF 207.399867
DKK 7.474057
DOP 69.66536
DZD 154.566908
EGP 61.710182
ERN 17.50501
ETB 183.744977
FJD 2.5576
FKP 0.86322
GBP 0.871014
GEL 3.127543
GGP 0.86322
GHS 13.315075
GIP 0.86322
GMD 84.661239
GNF 10246.266097
GTQ 8.905077
GYD 244.191156
HKD 9.14053
HNL 31.065356
HRK 7.534976
HTG 152.844834
HUF 357.742294
IDR 20463.706636
ILS 3.387338
IMP 0.86322
INR 111.692585
IQD 1528.770862
IRR 1534605.865331
ISK 143.751524
JEP 0.86322
JMD 184.551306
JOD 0.827368
JPY 184.799242
KES 150.834874
KGS 102.05397
KHR 4682.006532
KMF 492.474011
KPW 1050.266353
KRW 1743.125795
KWD 0.360008
KYD 0.972746
KZT 552.515121
LAK 25621.499127
LBP 105104.562444
LKR 379.64954
LRD 213.853019
LSL 19.243548
LTL 3.445849
LVL 0.705907
LYD 7.386857
MAD 10.746618
MDL 20.063828
MGA 4875.141458
MKD 61.658243
MMK 2450.543907
MNT 4178.01432
MOP 9.41695
MRU 46.668609
MUR 54.734502
MVR 17.961546
MWK 2031.747942
MXN 20.104507
MYR 4.588066
MZN 74.582844
NAD 19.244236
NGN 1598.055872
NIO 42.846436
NOK 10.778384
NPR 178.93947
NZD 1.973573
OMR 0.448703
PAB 1.167215
PEN 4.022661
PGK 4.89323
PHP 71.725003
PKR 325.133884
PLN 4.244673
PYG 7112.69685
QAR 4.2543
RON 5.201311
RSD 117.45276
RUB 85.482272
RWF 1704.987961
SAR 4.327033
SBD 9.354836
SCR 16.183476
SDG 700.787317
SEK 10.922429
SGD 1.489441
SHP 0.871284
SLE 28.766848
SLL 24471.422752
SOS 666.937915
SRD 43.420659
STD 24154.557453
STN 24.798764
SVC 10.212714
SYP 128.987104
SZL 19.244203
THB 37.834353
TJS 10.907457
TMT 4.084502
TND 3.370263
TOP 2.809857
TRY 53.062706
TTD 7.924946
TWD 36.812457
TZS 3028.366626
UAH 51.310947
UGX 4365.199908
USD 1.167001
UYU 46.483049
UZS 14056.523
VES 595.344003
VND 30744.632332
VUV 137.796705
WST 3.160846
XAF 653.892593
XAG 0.013987
XAU 0.000251
XCD 3.153878
XCG 2.103595
XDR 0.811029
XOF 650.607341
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.504878
ZAR 19.212912
ZMK 10504.409041
ZMW 21.972067
ZWL 375.773736
  • RBGPF

    -0.2100

    60.79

    -0.35%

  • CMSC

    0.0898

    23.14

    +0.39%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    15.93

    -0.44%

  • RELX

    -0.1600

    31.46

    -0.51%

  • AZN

    -2.7600

    184.96

    -1.49%

  • BTI

    1.3500

    66.7

    +2.02%

  • NGG

    0.4500

    87.43

    +0.51%

  • BP

    -0.0200

    44.12

    -0.05%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    50.96

    -0.06%

  • RIO

    -2.4500

    109.59

    -2.24%

  • BCE

    -0.2000

    24.19

    -0.83%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.6

    +0.17%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    15.48

    -0.19%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.14

    +0.08%

  • BCC

    2.4200

    69.4

    +3.49%

Impact of Israeli-Palestinian conflict plays out on screen in Berlin
Impact of Israeli-Palestinian conflict plays out on screen in Berlin / Photo: Ronny HARTMANN - AFP

Impact of Israeli-Palestinian conflict plays out on screen in Berlin

This year's Berlin Film Festival has seen controversy raging off-screen over the Gaza war, with some of the works being shown also grappling with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and its global impact.

Text size:

Gaza has been a point of heated debate since the first day of the festival, when jury president Wim Wenders answered a question about the German government's support for Israel by saying: "We cannot really enter the field of politics."

That sparked a backlash from figures including Arundhati Roy, Javier Bardem and Tilda Swinton.

Festival director Tricia Tuttle has defended Wenders and denied accusations that the festival has engaged in censorship.

On screen, one of the films dealing with the global ramifications of the conflict -- past and present -- is the documentary "Who Killed Alex Odeh?"

Directed by Jason Osder and William Lafi Youmans, the film looks at the aftermath of the killing of the Palestinian-American activist of the title.

Odeh was the West Coast regional director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee and was killed in a bomb attack at the ADC's offices in Santa Ana, California in 1985.

Among the film's wealth of archive footage is testimony to a congressional committee from Oliver Revell, then FBI assistant director, who said "members of a Jewish extremist element" were likely responsible.

Odeh's widow and daughter also speak movingly about the killing's impact on their lives.

No one has ever been convicted for the bombing.

The film traces how suspicion fell in particular on several members of the Jewish Defense League, a group founded by extremist rabbi Meir Kahane before his own assassination in 1990.

Youmans told AFP that despite dealing with an event from more than 40 years ago, the film took on "a burning kind of urgency" given the influence that Kahane's ideology has gained in Israel in recent years.

The current far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir previously campaigned for Kahane's now-banned political party, Kach, and became notorious for his anti-Arab rhetoric.

Did Youmans himself have any qualms about coming to Berlin, given the controversy around the festival?

"I feel that Alex's story is a necessary one to be told," Youmans said, adding it would be "self-defeatist" not to show it at the festival.

As for the response from German audiences, he said he has found that there is "a public opinion here... that is more willing to question unconditional support for Israel, is more willing to show solidarity with the Palestinians".

- 'Rare' collaboration -

In "Where To?" by Israeli director Assaf Machnes, the conflict remains off screen but makes its presence felt.

It follows 55-year-old Palestinian cab driver Hassan, played with warmth and subtlety by Ehab Salami, as he ferries passengers through the nocturnal streets of Berlin.

He strikes up an unlikely bond with Israeli passenger Amir, a lost soul in his early 20s played by Ido Tako, which leads Hassan to reflect on roads not taken in his own life.

Salami is himself a Palestinian who lives in Israel and Machnes says that the film represents a collaboration which is "very, very rare" in Israeli cinema.

"Actors that were auditioning for (Hassan's) role were very thirsty for a role like that," Machnes told AFP.

He said that the film was partially inspired by his own chance meeting with a Palestinian cab driver in Berlin.

"It was different than the usual encounters I have with my Palestinian artist friends; there was this unbinding connection, because we don't know if we're going to see each other" again, he said.

While Machnes says he does not think of his own work as inherently political, he wryly observes that "in Israel, if you film a cat drinking milk, it's political".

While recognising that "we all live in a political context", Machnes told AFP he tries in his work to avoid any "intention to preach".

If the film does have a message, it is about the possibility of empathy in even the most difficult situations.

Salami said he hoped the government in Israel would heed the film's example to "make the way for peace... and something different".

S.Ogawa--JT