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Children trapped in the Middle East conflict
Promises, directed by B.Z. Goldberg, Justine Shapiro
and Carlos Bolado
By Gabriela Notaras
6 June 2002
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Any documentary that sensitively deals with the plight of children
caught up in the Palestinian and Israeli conflict deserves acknowledgement.
Promises, a 106-minute documentary directed by B.Z. Goldberg,
Justine Shapiro and Carlos Bolado and currently screening in selected
Australian cinemas, is one such work.
Shot in Israel and the West Bank Occupied Territories in 1997,
1998 and 2000, a period of relative calm following the Oslo Accords,
the film chronicles the lives of several Palestinian and Israeli
children. It was the work of relatively inexperienced filmmakers
who brought the children together as friends.
Goldberg studied filmmaking at New York University and worked
as a journalist in Israel. He was inspired to make the film after
he saw Palestinian children playing the intifada
game while working as a television soundman during the first
uprising in Palestine. Some of the children would play-act as
Israelis, beating up or shooting the Arabs.
The Arabs demonstrated or threw stones.
Promises traces Goldbergs journey to Jerusalem
and the West Bank Palestinian communities where he gradually befriends
seven children aged between 9 and 13 years. The three PalestiniansSanabel
and Faraj, from the Deheishe refugee camp near Bethlehem, and
Mahmoud from Jerusalemand four IsraelisShlomo, Moishe
and twin brothers Yarko and Danielall live within 20 minutes
of each other.
Faraj speaks about the land taken from his grandparents by
the Israelis and hopes one day that it will be returned. Mahmoud,
whose father owners a grocery store, is a Hamas supporter. Sanabels
father, who is a journalist, has been imprisoned in an Israeli
jail for over two years without charge. Goldberg accompanies the
family on their monthly trip to the prison, rising at 5 am for
the long journey, made even longer by the constant border controls
and checkpoints. They are allowed to visit for half an hour.
Of the Israeli children, Shlomo is an ultra-orthodox Jew who
studies the Torah 12 hours a day. Moishe comes from an extreme
right-wing Jewish settlement and tells the filmmakers that he
hates all Arabs. Yarko and Daniel, who are secular Jews, have
a more enlightened outlook. They are fascinated when their grandfather,
a Holocaust survivor, tells them he does not believe in god.
Promises exposes some aspects of the apartheid-like
repression of the Palestinian people, including the endless military
checkpoints for those employed inside Israel or attempting to
visit relatives. Those without documents are searched and turned
back. The documentary contains several deeply moving scenes, particularly
when the Palestinian children explain how friends and family have
been killed or injured by heavily armed Israeli soldiers. It also
records the hopes and fears of Yarko and Daniel, who discuss each
morning which bus to take to school, worried that it might be
attacked by Palestinian suicide bombers.
Although hardened by the constant threat of armed conflict
and bloodshed, most of the children, however, retain their natural
exuberance and enthusiasm. For example, Yarko and Daniels
curiosity about Faraj is aroused when Goldberg recounts the Palestinian
boys tearful reaction to losing a running race in which
he represented the Deheishe refugee camp. The twins, who are volleyball
players, lost the finals while representing their own school and
immediately empathise with Faraj. Goldberg proposes the twins
meet Faraj, Sanabel and their friends.
Moishe and Shlomo are unwilling to meet the Palestinian children.
Back in Deheishe, Faraj is also reluctant. Sanabel challenges
Faraj, saying, I dont know of one Palestinian child
who tried to explain our situation to an Israeli. The Palestinians
finally agree to meet Yarko and Daniel, who enter a refugee camp
for the first time in their lives.
They play soccer, talk about their experiences and eat at Farajs
house, laughing and joking like ordinary children. This meeting,
however, becomes serious when Faraj tearfully explains his fear
that when Goldberg returns to the US everything will be the same
and their newly forged friendship will fade. Everyone is visibly
moved, not just by Farajs sadness but also by the bitter
reality of his comments.
These scenes undermine mass media and fundamentalist claims
that Arabs and Jews are naturally antagonistic. They also demonstrate
that the real obstacles to forging and maintaining these friendships
are external and political, factors that the children themselves
cannot resolve. This is reinforced towards the end of the film.
In a sombre epilogue shot in 2000, the children are a few years
older and their friendship has lapsed. Deteriorating political
conditions have made it more and more difficult for them to meet
and the twins have stopped returning phone calls from Faraj. Faraj
and his companions become disillusioned that they will never be
able to reestablish their friendship. Faraj tells the camera that
peace is not possible in his lifetime and has stopped thinking
about the future because the grueling environment in the refugee
camp does not permit him to dream.
Promises, which was nominated for an Academy Award this
year, has a number of affecting moments, particularly when placed
within the context of the brutal military operations now being
unleashed by the Sharon-led Israeli government against West Bank
towns and refugee camps. It provides a stark portrait of the difficulties
confronting Palestinian children and the unremitting repression
of their communities. Unfortunately it also leaves many questions
unanswered.
Shapiro told the PBS-POV web site that the filmmakers decided
on a non-judgmental approach: We didnt
want to make a film to educate or convince an audience
to take a particular side.... The beauty of being a documentary
filmmaker is that your job is to ask the questions, not to engage
in polemic. So we listened, we didnt challenge. Taking sides
is easy. Listening with an open heart is more interesting, more
challenging.
However, this method provides a rationale for not examining
the essential causes of the Israel-Palestine conflict. It weakens
Promises by tending to reduce everything to moral issues.
In fact, the documentary provides no more than a cursory overview
of Palestinian dispossession and no explanation of Zionist ideology.
Without this, no understanding, or humane solution, is possible.
Instead of exploring these issues, audiences are simply left with
the ideas of the childrenthe innocent victims and those
without the means to discover the complex political history that
produced these events.
In the early part of the 20th century sections of the Palestinian
Arab and Jewish working class and intelligentsia were animated
by the conception of a united struggle for a democratic, secular
and socialist perspective in the Middle East. Inspired by the
Russian Revolution of 1917, they formed the Palestinian Communist
Party and conducted a difficult but principled battle for this
perspective before the Soviet Stalinist bureaucracy politically
disoriented the organisation in the late 1920s. Some reference
to the historic efforts of those attempting to combat Zionism
and other nationalist ideologies in the region would have strengthened
the documentary dramatically.
Despite its limitations, Promises deserves to be seen
for its portrayal of those children who try to live through, and
rise above, the impact of Zionist oppression.
See Also:
Report details Israeli seizure
of West Bank land
[25 May 2002]
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict
and the dead-end of Zionism
[16 May 2002]
The political dead
end of Labour Zionism
[5 April 2001]
Zionisms legacy
of ethnic cleansing
[22 January 2001]
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