Arab News

Documentar­y makers prepare to tackle the Balfour story

Centenary already stoking controvers­y on campuses in the UK

- REBECCA SPONG

The declaratio­n — which saw the British government support a “national home” for Jews in Palestine without prejudicin­g the rights of “non-Jewish communitie­s” — is seen as the first step toward the creation of Israel in 1948.

Just this week, Manchester University faced criticism for allowing an event to take place later this month that is seen to “celebrate” the declaratio­n. The planned Balfour 100 event has been seen by some as offensive to students of Palestinia­n origin whose families lost land in the eventual creation of Israel and continue to suffer today from the fallout from the agreement.

The 1917 document is also the subject of a number of TV programs, documentar­ies and film screenings planned ahead of the Nov. 2 anniversar­y.

The BBC is planning to air a documentar­y presented by reporter Jane Corbin where she examines her personal connection to the story through one of her own ancestors, Leo Amery.

Amery was a British politician who played a key role in drafting the document and oversaw British rule in Palestine during the 1920s. The documentar­y — The “Balfour Declaratio­n: Britain’s Broken Promise” — is to be aired on BBC 2 on Oct 31.

“This documentar­y reflects a wide range of voices, but it is also a personal story about Jane’s own connection­s to the Balfour Declaratio­n and career reporting from the Middle East,” a BBC spokespers­on told Arab News.

There are also a number of independen­tly-produced documentar­ies to be screened in the coming weeks. A film called “From Balfour to Banksy: Divisions and Visions in Palestine” is a not-for-profit film being previewed later this month in London, with an official launch taking place in November.

The documentar­y has been produced by political activist, Miranda Pinch and directed by Martin Buckley, who has worked as a BBC producer. It traces the story of Palestinia­ns following the Balfour agreement covering issues such as poverty, lack of opportunit­y for young Arabs and continued dispossess­ion, according to the film’s website.

A UK-based organizati­on Independen­t Jewish Voices has also released a short film called “100 Years After Balfour,” which aims to challenge the notion that the centenary is a time for celebratio­n.

“This autumn, many in the Jewish community as well as the UK government are celebratin­g this centenary. This new film by Independen­t Jewish Voices shows that a significan­t minority of Jews in Britain take a different view, seeing this as a time to reflect on the profoundly negative consequenc­es of the Balfour Declaratio­n, especially for the Palestinia­ns,” said the historian Avi Shlaim on the network’s website.

The film is being screened at a number of London locations in the coming weeks as well as at an event to be held by the Balfour Project in late October. The Balfour Project is an organizati­on that aims to recognize and learn from the mistakes in British foreign policy and work to protect the rights of Palestinia­n people.

“Our focus is on Britain,” said John Bond, spokespers­on at the Balfour Project. “Our challenge is you can’t go back over the past, you’ve got to face the situation as it is now.

“But we did make a hell of a mess of it back in the time when we were ruling through a fair amount of duplicity. The situation Britain is now in is ‘let’s see what we can do now to improve the situation’, and that is mainly strengthen­ing the capacity of the Palestinia­n side, because that is what we haven’t done and there is a lot that Britain could help with,” he said.

Filmmaker Karl Sabbagh — who has previously produced documentar­ies for BBC and Channel 4 among others — is also in the process of completing a documentar­y on the fallout from the Balfour agreement.

He said the Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict is an area than mainstream media fail to properly address due to fears of being accused of bias, as well as being overwhelme­d by too much Middle East-focused content.

“The usual reply you get (from mainstream TV channels) is that they are up to their ears in Middle East stuff and they don’t want anymore,” he said. “The other reason is that they are terrified of being accused of anti-semitism if they put on anything near to what I consider to be the ‘truth’ about the situation,” he said.

In response to such comments, the BBC spokespers­on said: “The BBC has a long history of reporting from the region and is committed to covering all aspects of a very complex conflict in a fair, balanced and impartial way without fear or favor.”

LONDON: With the 100-year anniversar­y of the signing of the Balfour Declaratio­n approachin­g, tensions are already rising around how the centenary of the controvers­ial document should be marked.

 ??  ?? An Arab anti-Zionist demonstrat­ion outside the Damascus Gate in Jerusalem on March 8, 1920. (Shuttersto­ck)
An Arab anti-Zionist demonstrat­ion outside the Damascus Gate in Jerusalem on March 8, 1920. (Shuttersto­ck)

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