Newsweek

The Good Guy Is the Bad Guy

A thrilling Israeli TV series offers radically balanced portraits of both sides of the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict

- BY SHIRA RUBIN @shira_rubin

fauda, which means “chaos” in Arabic, is used by the Israeli military to signify an operation that has gone bust. It is also, aptly, the title of an acclaimed television thriller about a conflict that continues to rip through the Middle East and internatio­nal politics. A war is, by definition, messy and complex; the Israeli-palestinia­n conflict is beyond that—an entrenched web of mayhem that Fauda, a production of the tiny Israeli TV industry, has done a superb job of untangling, with nuance and poignancy.

“Arabs tell us it’s an Arab show, right-wingers tell us it’s a right-wing show, leftists a left-wing show,” says Lior Raz, one of Fauda’s co-creators and the show’s star. “We worried the reaction would be just the opposite.”

When Fauda premiered in Israel in 2015, Hamas condemned it as a “Zionist” plot but also posted a streaming link on its website. Since then, its leaders and its prisoners have joined the show’s fan base. Co-creator Avi Issacharof­f, a journalist who has spent decades covering Palestinia­n and Arab affairs in the West Bank and Gaza for, among others, the news site Walla, suggests that for many Hamas militants and Israelis, Fauda is cathartic. “As an Israeli, for example, you cannot feel sympathy for a terrorist, but as a viewer, you are allowed to feel for a killer and see that he’s also a father, a lover, a spiritual leader.” Raz plays Doron, a member of mista’arvim— Israel’s Arabic-speaking counterter­rorism unit. The men and women are specifical­ly trained to operate undercover in enemy territory in order to assassinat­e or capture accused terrorists. Fauda’s first season (streaming on Netflix since March) had Doron coming out of retirement to hunt down Abu Ahmad, a Hamas militant he thought he had killed. The second season, returning to Israeli TV this month and Netflix in 2018, explores internal Palestinia­n rivalries and ISIS recruitmen­t in the region.

There are plenty of victims on both sides of Fauda and no real heroes, Doron included. In the first season, he is easily seduced back into espionage, abandoning his family to do so. And the violence perpetuate­d by his team can be frightenin­gly casual: In the first episode, they pose as delivery people at a Palestinia­n wedding party; when the mission goes bad (they accidental­ly kill the groom), the cycle of violence started that night plays out over the rest of the season. The bride is eventually recruited to bomb an Israeli nightclub. She cries as she looks around the bar, and the female bartender consoles her. For a moment, it seems the woman might reconsider her mission, but seconds later, it’s carnage; the terrorist, the bartender and scores of others are dead. The bartender was based on Raz’s 18-year-old girlfriend, fatally stabbed by a Palestinia­n in 1990. For Raz, who served in the Israeli military, writing the show has been a

form of therapy. “Like so many of the characters in the series, I’ve dealt with my own post-trauma through writing and acting and the need to delve into dark memories I’d rather not touch.”

The effects of violence on a society are rarely examined on American television or in films; Hollywood would prefer to treat war and terrorism like a video game, without real sadness or consequenc­e. Israel’s television industry, by contrast, is determined to highlight the messy emotions and consequenc­es of conflict. Its last blockbuste­r export, Hatufim, was turned into Showtime’s Homeland. And Issacharof­f and Raz have a second project for Netflix, a CIA- Mossad show called Hit and Run.

Israeli audiences have “gotten used to ignoring Palestinia­ns,” says Issacharof­f, noting that Israel is about to mark 50 years of grinding occupation of the West Bank. Fauda’s intent, to find empathy for both sides, is in stark contrast to the narratives pushed by the region’s hardline leaders, including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has categorize­d all “Arabs”—lumping together Palestinia­ns, Arab-israelis, ISIS and more—as enemies of the Jewish state and the civilized world. Through the character of Doron, Fauda reveals how Israeli counterter­rorism has brutalized and manipulate­d Palestinia­ns. In the first season, in his undercover alias, Doron befriends a female Palestinia­n doctor who was raised in France; she has only recently returned to the occupied territory, where her family has ties to Hamas. Eventually, he falls for her, turning from exploiter to lover to, as must happen, betrayer. “As an outsider, she’s the only one who’s not sick,” says Laëtitia Eïdo, who plays the doctor. “Because both sides have been raised in survival mode, they tend to see the other as inhuman in order to feel safe.”

Nahd Basheir, an Israeli-arab actor from the Druze minority, plays an ISIS member in the new season. To his mind, Fauda is revolution­ary simply for presenting Arabs beyond the usual pop culture depictions of fanatical terrorists or simpleton menial workers. “The show does not have aspiration­s for peace,” says Basheir, “but that’s not the role of art. It’s to force us to see ourselves.”

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 ??  ?? WAY OF THE GUN Clockwise from far left: Fauda co-creator and star Raz (front window); Rona-lee Shim’on plays the only female member of mista’arvim in Season 2; Jameel Khoury, center, plays a Hamas operative; co-creator Issacharof­f.
WAY OF THE GUN Clockwise from far left: Fauda co-creator and star Raz (front window); Rona-lee Shim’on plays the only female member of mista’arvim in Season 2; Jameel Khoury, center, plays a Hamas operative; co-creator Issacharof­f.
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