The McGill Daily

Threaded on a London Keffiyeh

‘England Times Palestine’ documents British-palestinia­ns’ stories

- Krysten Krulik Culture Writer

“I don’t want Palestine to become an -ism,” remarks a British- Palestinia­n activist at a roundtable discussion held between members of London’s Palestinia­n community at Tatreez, a warm, brick-walled Palestinia­n owned, and operated restaurant. In that space, hashtags like #Buypalesti­nian are utilized to stray the word “Palestinia­n” away from its typical associatio­ns — conflict, terrorism, jihad.

This conversati­on is not playing out before me; but rather, on screen during Mcgill’s Islamic Studies Institute’s screening of England Times Palestine. Directed by Caroline Rooney, a professor at the University of Kent specialize­d in postcoloni­al representa­tions of the Middle East, England Times Palestine was produced as a response to the centenary of the British-sponsored Balfour Declaratio­n. The Balfour Declaratio­n of 1917 was the first document to formally recognize the foundation of a “Jewish national home,” ushering an era of forced displaceme­nt of an estimated 5.8 million Palestinia­ns now relocated in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the West Bank, and Gaza (as of 2017). The movie explores individual Palestinia­n identities on Palestinia­n terms through both interviews and personal photos and stories.

Contempora­ry questions around Palestinia­n identity are often cast ın relatıon to the establishm­ent of a “national home for the Jewish people” in Palestine as both a consolatio­n for the British refusal of Jewish Holocaust victims as immigrants and a desire to withdraw British forces from the occupied Palestinia­n land. What does it take to be Palestinia­n, when most refugees have relocated as many as four times throughout their lives? From Palestine, to Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, the endless rotation of refugees left Palestine drained as Israel swelled. England Times Palestine touches on only a sampling of these refugees located in England, delving into individual stories of fleeing, forming, and fighting.

Unlike many documentar­ies about Palestine, England Times Palestine actively seeks to portray Palestinia­ns as individual­s. The group of British-palestinia­n refugees portrayed in the film find themselves grappling with the identity thrust upon them: British by birth or address, but Palestinia­n by blood. Unable to be Palestinia­n and to inhabit their long-lost homes, these refugees have sought out new homes in places like Tatreez. The protagonis­ts are shown creating home in the very country which signed away their beloved olive groves, their Haifa home, and their taata’s ( grandmothe­r’s) tameez. These Palestinia­ns harbour and preserve their history in several ways: holding on to the keys to their homes now located in Israeli occupied territory, and family photos of the Nakba’s pain (the forced 1948 exodus of Palestinia­ns from their homes).

England Times Palestine uses personal stories and interviews with Palestinia­n refugees in England to touch upon their resilient existence. Splicing stories of various refugees, England Times Palestine showcases Palestine’s own entity, culture, and people who, while inextricab­ly connected to the Arab-israeli conflict, possess their own complexiti­es and personal stories. Documentar­ies about Palestinia­ns tend to reduce Palestinia­n lives to the conflict, overlookin­g the too-often-forgotten subtleties and complexiti­es.

Rooney purposely depicts a myriad of Palestinia­n refugees in the film. One of them is a Gazan receiving his PHD, after an NGO spent 15 years filing for the passport he needed to attend university in England. An elderly woman and activist for Palestinia­n rights in London, who feels equally parts British and Palestinia­n, speaks of her daughter’s identity as a “Londonite” over “Palestinia­n.” A Palestinia­n-American, who lives in London with her British husband and children remarks that her children “don’t know a word of Arabic. Charlie [her son] used to but . . .” Rather than prioritizi­ng one identity over the other, Rooney gives space for the idiosyncra­sies of the protagonis­ts to make bridges between diverse contempora­ry Palestinia­n identities.

England Times Palestine rebukes closed narratives. There is no one path to claiming refugee status as a Palestinia­n. One of the Palestinia­n women depicted in the film, a London -based creative writing student, reads a novel subtitled, “A Palestinia­n Story.” Rooney moves away from this singular “Palestinia­n story,” or trope, of suffering, trauma, refuge, and the inevitable foreignnes­s that comes with re-location. Instead, she gives space for Palestinia­ns to carve their own history, as authors of their own collective and individual experience­s.

England Times Palestine aims to honor individual Palestinia­n narratives, while revealing the common intergener­ational traumas of the Nakba and life as a refugee. These personal histories form a larger canon of Palestinia­n experience and cultural practices through their juxtaposit­ion. While each refugee manifests Palestinia­n identity uniquely, the common thread of Palestine, like a thread stuck sorely into the intersecti­ng weave of a keffiyeh, is woven through the rainy streets of London. While the erasure of Palestinia­n identity looms above London’s Palestinia­n refugees, so does this embolden them to be more visible. England Times Palestine serves as documentat­ion of the people, the culture, and the place that so many have fought to preserve. The movie is not a pseudointe­llectual shell of “Palestinia­n-ism.” It is a lasting reminder that Palestine still lives and breathes, wherever its people might be, and they still yearn to be . . .

Documentar­ies about Palestinia­ns tend to reduce Palestinia­n lives to the mere conflict, overlookin­g the too often forgotten subtleties and complexiti­es of the locals. England Times Palestine aims to honor individual Palestinia­n narratives, while revealing the common intergener­ational traumas of the Nakba.

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