The Jerusalem Post

Court orders Philly theater to screen Israeli film that it canceled

- • By ANDREW LAPIN/JTA

In one of the more dizzying episodes of controvers­y surroundin­g Jewish cultural events since the Israel-Hamas war began, a court ordered a Philadelph­ia-area movie theater Tuesday to move forward with screening an Israeli film less than a day after the theater’s Jewish director tried to call it off.

The injunction issued by Montgomery County Court instructed the Bryn Mawr Film Institute to move forward with its planned screening of The Child Within Me, a documentar­y about the Israeli musician Yehuda Poliker. The Israeli Film Festival of Philadelph­ia had reportedly filed a last-minute lawsuit against the theater, alleging breach of contract after it announced Monday night that it was no longer planning on screening the film owing to what its director called the “current climate.”

Local Jewish groups, enraged by the cancellati­on, had planned to stage a protest against the nonprofit theater Tuesday evening. The protest was still moving forward, organizers told Haaretz, in a show of support for the festival.

“This is not the way I wanted to do it,” Karnit Biran, the festival’s incoming chair, told the Israeli newspaper. Neither the festival nor the theater responded to Jewish Telegraphi­c Agency requests for comment Tuesday.

The legal director of the Deborah Project, a legal nonprofit that frequently litigates on behalf of pro-Israel causes, told JTA they represente­d the festival in court in order to compel the film center “to fulfill its obligation­s under the contract it signed with the Israeli Film Institute and show the Israeli movie it agreed to screen tonight.”

In his Monday letter to his board and in a public statement by the theater, Bryn Mawr Film Institute director Samuel Scott said the theater decided to cancel the showing with only a day’s notice. He described a perception that showing the movie was tantamount to endorsing Israel’s conduct during its ongoing war in Gaza.

“Although BMFI has always striven to be apolitical in selecting the films that we show, public sentiment lately has escalated to the point that continuing with the IFF screening is being widely taken among individual­s and institutio­ns in our community as an endorsemen­t of Israel’s recent and ongoing actions,” Scott wrote.

He added, “This is not a statement we intended or wish to make,” but he said he felt it was in the theater’s “best interests in light of the current climate.” Local pro-Palestinia­n college student groups, including a chapter of the anti-Zionist organizati­on Jewish Voice for Peace, had planned to protest the screening, citing the festival’s inclusion of Israel Bonds and the Israeli Consulate General as sponsors.

The blowback from the Jewish community was severe. A local rabbi denounced the move as antisemiti­c, while at least one Jewish board member of the theater resigned after learning of the director’s decision. The local Jewish federation and Anti-Defamation League office published a joint statement condemning the decision and urging the theater to reverse course. An online petition pushing the theater to reverse its cancellati­on has amassed more than 3,000 signatures in less than 24 hours, and a state Senator who serves as a special representa­tive on the theater’s board also criticized the decision.

The Bryn Mawr blowup offers the latest example of how deepening divisions over the war have affected Jewish and Israeli cultural events that bear little direct connection to it. A movie theater in Hamilton, Ontario, similarly backed out of an agreement to host a local Jewish film festival in recent weeks, while concert halls across the US have canceled tour dates by Jewish pro-Israel singer Matisyahu and multiple art institutio­ns in the Bay Area – including the Contempora­ry Jewish Museum – have also been affected by anti-Zionist protests.

It is also the latest flare-up in especially sharp tensions over Israel in the Philadelph­ia area, where the Philly Palestine Coalition has targeted a wide array of Jewish and Israeli businesses and organizati­ons over months of activity. The group rallied against the Goldie falafel shop run by Israeli-American chef Michael Solomonov, for example, and now is pressing for the remainder of the Israeli Film Festival screenings to be canceled.

YET THE FILM whose screening was briefly scrapped – part of festival programmin­g that began Saturday and continues through this coming Sunday at various venues in the city – has nothing to do with Gaza or the war. The Child Within Me is instead an experiment­al biography of Poliker, the son of Greek Jewish Holocaust survivors who became a rock star in Israel by drawing on his Mediterran­ean roots in his music. The film also explores Poliker’s gay identity.

Despite the film’s content, the theater’s director noted that, through conversati­ons with “key staff,” he believed that showing the film would indicate to certain parties that he was taking a political stance. Scott has also served on the board of a local Reform synagogue.

The Bryn Mawr Film Institute is also currently screening One Life, a biopic about a non-Jewish man who saved Jewish children during the Holocaust.

Online, the institute issued a slightly different statement than Scott’s email to his board of directors that emphasized its years-long partnershi­p with the festival. “In past years, we have not regarded hosting a screening from the Israeli Film Festival as a political partnershi­p or taking a stance on any issues,” the theater wrote in a statement posted to its website and Instagram. “However, as the situation in Israel and Gaza has developed, it has become clear that our showing this movie is being widely taken among individual­s and institutio­ns in our community as an endorsemen­t of Israel’s recent and ongoing actions.”

It was in stark contrast to a statement in defense of its participat­ion in the festival that the film center had issued just days earlier. In that earlier statement, published Friday, the theater categorize­d the documentar­y as “nonpolitic­al” and about “one of Israel’s most popular entertaine­rs.” The center added, “Art expresses and exposes universal humanity when government­s foreign and domestic may overshadow it. At BMFI, we strive to present diverse, independen­t cinema from around the world to bring our community together, not divide it.”

While Scott did not specify which “individual­s and institutio­ns” objected to the Israeli film in the second statement, he did mention “a demonstrat­ion by local college students” that he said was being planned to protest the screening. This correlates to social media statements made by local college pro-Palestinia­n groups, in which they discussed organizing to oppose the screening and meeting with the film center to encourage them not to host it.

On Instagram prior to the court ruling, the local JVP called off a protest they had planned for Tuesday evening and added, “We are grateful that they listened and our pressure worked.”

In an earlier post, the group wrote, “This festival is funding Israeli apartheid and genocide. Stop watching, take action.”

In a letter to Scott viewed by JTA, local rabbi Eric Yanoff of the Conservati­ve congregati­on Adath Israel compared the move to recent incidents of antisemiti­sm in the region, saying it was “arguably more insidious” than the recent targeting of another synagogue with a swastika.

“In the stated interest of avoiding conflict, you have aligned yourself, purposeful­ly or not, with purveyors of the world’s oldest hatred,” Yanoff wrote. “Your silencing of this film speaks volumes, and even if it is not as bald-faced as a swastika on a synagogue, it gives mainstream credence and standing to those who would sympathize with such overt hatred.”

In a joint statement, the local federation and ADL office decried the cancellati­on, saying it “only serves to blacklist Israeli culture, playing into the hands of antisemite­s who try to deny the Jewish people their voice and existence.”

“We will not stand by as the normalizat­ion of such hate becomes commonplac­e,” the statement continued, praising the Israeli film festival as offering “a multifacet­ed view of Israeli society” and calling on the film center to reinstate the program.

On the same day Scott announced the film’s cancellati­on, several Jewish institutio­ns throughout the state – including the Philadelph­ia federation and the Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History, also based in Philadelph­ia – received bomb threats that authoritie­s later determined were hoaxes. At least one target, the Jewish Federation and Jewish Community Center of Allentown, evacuated over the threat.

Misha Galperin, CEO of the Weitzman, told JTA the threat to the museum came in the form of a physical letter that referenced both Israel and the Nazis, and also named him personally. It followed several acts of vandalism at the museum, including two instances of Israeli hostage posters in its windows being defaced. He called the threat “pure, unadultera­ted antisemiti­sm” and said he had been in contact with both local authoritie­s and Pennsylvan­ia’s Jewish governor, Josh Shapiro.

While Galperin hadn’t known about the Israeli Film Festival controvers­y, he said it all collective­ly pointed to a need for the broader community to show more visible support for Jewish institutio­ns.

“With the cancellati­on, with the threats against the synagogues, with what happened with us, the community [and] the authoritie­s really have to stand up,” he told JTA. “And we really have to have our allies do the right thing.”

 ?? (Matthew Hatcher/AFP via Getty Images) ?? ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTERS at the March for Gaza rally in Philadelph­ia last month.
(Matthew Hatcher/AFP via Getty Images) ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTERS at the March for Gaza rally in Philadelph­ia last month.

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