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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, December 30, 2016
Palestine documentary stirs controversy in Germany
Emran Feroz-28 December 2016People demonstrate. Israeli soldiers give chase. Sometimes they use lethal force. On the sidelines, Israeli settlers stand by, grinning under the protection of the soldiers.
It is just another day in Nabi Saleh, a small village in the central occupied West Bank, as captured in Even Though My Land is Burning, a new documentary by Israeli filmmaker Dror Dayan, who now lives in Berlin.
The film portrays the lives of Palestinian villagers under occupation
and how some anti-Zionist Israeli Jews support their cause and their
resistance. It shows how the organized resistance works in Nabi Saleh.
The choice of Nabi Saleh as the film’s focal point was deliberate. The
village has been a center of unarmed resistance to Israel’s occupation
for years now, but while it is just one small part of a bigger, more
complicated picture, it is an important one, according to Dayan.
“Nabi Saleh is one model or case study out of many,” the filmmaker told
The Electronic Intifada. “It shows what happens when people choose a
certain kind of resistance and open their struggle to certain kinds of
allies. But we mustn’t forget that the issue of Palestine is much
broader than that. We all know that the situation in Gaza is not
comparable to that of the West Bank. The same goes for some refugee
camps outside the country.”
Dayan’s film doesn’t shy away from the bloody reality in Nabi Saleh. One
of the young local residents featured disappears from one minute to the
next. Only later does the audience learn that he was killed by the
Israeli military.
Uncomfortable truths
Nor does the film shy away from uncomfortable truths. The involvement of
children in village resistance proved challenging to western audiences.
At screenings in Germany, where Dayan now lives, this was one recurring
question: are children not instrumentalized by their community by
joining in the resistance?
One young woman, during a question and answer session after a screening
in Tübingen in southern Germany, put it this way: “It’s a bit weird to
see all these children. Do they really want to do this?”
Dayan doesn’t flinch. “From the very first second of their lives, these
children grew up under occupation. It’s natural for them to resist,” he
told The Electronic Intifada.
His answer is reflected in the film. One man featured in Even Though My Land is Burning simply asserts, “Tomorrow’s resistance will be led by them.”
And among the Germans watching, Palestinians of a certain generation
were puzzled by the questions focusing on children. “We live in
different worlds,” 54-year-old Mahmoud, who has lived in Germany for
more than 20 years, told me later. For him and many others, the
resistance of Palestinian children is not just normal, it is necessary.
In the film, most of the protesters are from Nabi Saleh, but a few
anti-Zionist Israeli Jews join the crowd. Dayan focuses on one of them,
Ben Ronen, a young Israeli who has dedicated his activism to the
Palestinian resistance. As a white, Jewish Israeli, he is well aware of
his privileged role in the conflict. However, it also becomes very clear
that Israeli society itself does not have much space for people like
Ronen. As long as such people support the Palestinian struggle, they are
always considered outsiders or traitors.
To leave or stay
It was important to Dayan, who is strongly anti-Zionist, to show that
being against Zionism is not a matter of religion or ethnicity. He
believes, he said, that every Israeli Jew has the option to decide to
abandon Zionism.
“Ignorance is a choice,” Dayan said.
Dayan said anti-Zionist Israeli Jews, like those in his documentary, are
often considered either traitors or simply insane in wider Israeli
society. And with the success of the boycott, divestment and sanctions
movement, they are even seen as a self-hating fifth column.
He himself now lives in Berlin, having left Israel 11 years ago. He had
been called up for military service, like most Israelis, but as an only
child, he was not obligated to combat service, and he didn’t. Later, he
also rejected reserve duty in the West Bank. Today, the 35-year-old
Dayan says he would not join the military.
But despite that, he said, he doesn’t see his move to Germany as political. On the contrary.
“I don’t see my move to Germany as a political act – the political act would have been to stay and resist. I know that now.”

He concedes he did not want to spend the rest of his life in a
“militaristic” and “racist” society, but Germany was a practical choice.
His grandfather was a German Jew who was forced to escape from Berlin
when the Nazis came to power. On that background, Dayan was able to
obtain German citizenship, an irony, he points out, considering
Germany’s position on the Palestinian right of return.
“Germany is a big supporter of denying Palestinians their right of return. But I got my documents very quickly,” he said.
And his motivation to make the movie – which was also his final project
for his master’s degree studies at the Babelsberg Konrad Wolf Film
University in Potsdam – was in part informed by the political reality he
found in Germany. For instance, he said, the Palestinian struggle and
anti-Zionism are still seen negatively in Germany, even in left-leaning
circles.
Criticism from the left
Before the first screening of Even Though My Land is Burning in
Berlin in March, Dayan was criticized in several quarters, including
personal smears from individuals mostly associated with the so-called
Antideutsche (literally, anti-German), an extreme pro-Zionist
neoconservative movement within the German left.
One such commentator even suggested since
Dayan was an Israeli Jew, the film’s “anti-Semitism gets the kosher
stamp,” suggesting also that making what he cast as an anti-Semitic film
was the price Dayan had to pay for assimilation.
A demonstration was also organized and the Berlin cinema where the
screening was taking place received several threats in the weeks before,
warning that the cinema’s reputation would be destroyed and the
playhouse would be branded anti-Semitic.
But the screening went ahead regardless, and Dayan said he believes he
is luckier than others. Pro-Palestinian activists who are not Jewish
face much harsher defamation, he said: there is still a certain line
German Zionists will not cross when it comes to Jewish activists.
“It’s ridiculous. These people call themselves left while using slogans
like ‘anti-fascism means solidarity with Israel,’” said Dayan. “The
discourse in Germany, especially inside the left, is a big problem. For
many of these so-called leftists, the bashing of pro-Palestinian
activists is the only way to keep their political careers afloat.”
In his film, Dayan also devoted space to the one-state solution. It was
important for him to bring up the issue, not in the sense of speaking on
behalf of Palestinians or advocating this as the only solution, but to
show audiences that a one-state solution is a vision shared by many and
offers real prospects for justice.
“For many Germans, the one-state solution is still unthinkable,” Dayan
said. “It contradicts the colonial idea of the Jewish state.”
And for all the difficulties he has encountered, Dayan also believes
that the Palestine solidarity movement in Germany is heading in the
right direction.
“The existence of Zionist colonialism in Palestine is a way for Germany
to put its history behind it. That’s something that people here will not
give up easily. But I think we are making progress.”
Emran Feroz is an Afghan-Austrian journalist currently based in Germany.
Editor’s note: an earlier version of this article stated that Dror
Dayan was not obligated to serve in the Israeli military. It has been
corrected to state that he was not obligated to combat service in the
military.