Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Movie on Palestine draws criticism from Israelis

- CLAIRE HEALY

A film released on Netflix in December tells the comingof-age story of a Palestinia­n girl amid the violent tumult of 1948 — the year Israel declared independen­ce — and has drawn fierce criticism from some Israelis online and in government, who say the movie distorts history and should be boycotted along with the streaming service.

But the film, “Farha,” which was selected as Jordan’s official entry for the 95th Academy Awards, has also helped bring the Palestinia­n perspectiv­e to a wider audience in the United States and Europe, and could mean more visibility for Palestinia­n historical narratives in the West, experts say.

It vividly depicts the horrors Palestinia­ns collective­ly refer to as the Nakba, or catastroph­e, including a series of massacres historians say were carried out by Israeli forces — and the forced exodus of 750,000 Palestinia­ns from their homeland.

This history is hotly contested in Israel, which celebrates the era as one of triumph and independen­ce and has at times censored documentat­ion of the Nakba. But it is also a history that is rarely included in mainstream media in the United States, where leaders have long treated political and financial support for Israel as “sacrosanct.”

Because of this, the film’s presence on Netflix is “a dramatic achievemen­t,” said Ilan Pappe, an Israeli historian and author of “The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine.”

“Farha,” which debuted at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival in 2021, is one of just a few cinematic representa­tions of the Nakba, the last of which was Egyptian filmmaker Yusri Nasrullah’s 2004 film adaptation of Elias Khoury’s novel “Bab el shams,” or “Gate of the Sun,” Pappe said.

“Netflix has put it on the stage in the North American context,” Hamid Dabashi, professor at Columbia University and editor of “Dreams of a Nation,” an archival compilatio­n of Palestinia­n cinema, said of the Palestinia­n experience.

“The fact that the Palestinia­n point of view and Palestinia­n narrative, in addition to the

Jewish narrative, is becoming part of the American mainstream — that’s the more exciting aspect of [‘Farha’],” he said.

In the film, Farha is a 14-year-girl who wants to escape life in her traditiona­l Palestinia­n village, get an education in the city and eventually become a teacher. But her ambitious plans are soon upended as tensions soar between Arabs and Jews in Mandatory Palestine, a British-controlled entity whose partition into two states was proposed by the United Nations in 1947.

Palestinia­ns rejected the proposal and British forces, facing attacks by Jewish insurgents, withdrew, prompting Israel to declare independen­ce.

In the movie, the Haganah militia, a predecesso­r to the Israel Defense Forces, advances on Farha’s village. Her father locks her in a pantry in the family home to keep her safe — and from there, through a keyhole and a crack in the door, she witnesses the brutal events of the Nakba unfold.

“I wanted to make this because I wanted … the world to see Palestinia­ns as humans,” the film’s Jordanian Palestinia­n director, Darin J. Sallam, said. Farha is “just a young girl … She didn’t choose this. She lost her childhood in this room,” she said.

The film weaves together different accounts of the Nakba that Sallam heard throughout her life, including from family members. Sallam’s father was an infant in Ramla, a historical­ly Palestinia­n commercial center captured by Israel in 1948. His parents fled to Jordan after hearing reports of violence in nearby villages, Sallam said.

Farha “represents the Palestinia­ns who had to move on and live with all the pain and losses,” she said, adding that she’s received messages from Palestinia­ns who say they watched the film with their families, including elderly relatives.

“A girl said to me that her grandfathe­r was very emotional, crying, and everybody started talking about the things that happened to them, like therapy. It’s like healing, and to me, this is amazing,” Sallam said.

Ahead of its Dec. 1 debut on Netflix, “Farha” became a target of criticism from some Israeli officials and individual­s on social media. Anonymous accounts bombarded the film’s page on IMDb, an online database of informatio­n on films and television series, with negative reviews.

Critics have homed in on a particular scene in “Farha” that they say wrongly depicts Haganah militants carrying out a massacre.

In it, Farha watches the fighters kill a family that has sought refuge in her home, at first sparing only a newborn infant. The unit’s commanding officer then orders a younger fighter to kill the infant but without using a gun, so as not to waste a bullet. The man, alone in the courtyard, is unable to do it and leaves it on the ground covered with a blanket.

But Israeli historians such as Pappe and Benny Morris, author of “The Birth of the Palestinia­n Refugee Problem,” say similar atrocities were documented throughout the Nakba.

“The old will die, but the young will remember with a film like ‘Farha,’” said Sallam, the director. “I hope that the film lives forever, and I hope that the film is now in people’s hearts.”

 ?? (TaleBox) ?? Karam Taher plays a 14-year-old Palestinia­n girl who witnesses the onset of the 1948 Nakba in the Jordanian film “Farha,” now streaming on Netflix.
(TaleBox) Karam Taher plays a 14-year-old Palestinia­n girl who witnesses the onset of the 1948 Nakba in the Jordanian film “Farha,” now streaming on Netflix.

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