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Just Married at Makor

Just Married

Just Married

Just Married by director Ayelet Bechar was really good. It documents the difficulties of two couples Israeli Arabs who marry Palestinians from Gaza or the West Bank. As of 2002 there is a law prohibiting family reunification.

Suhad and Rabia are a young couple that met at university. To be together Suhad becomes an illegal resident in Jerusalem. The film depicts her change from vibrancy to depression as she stays in her home most of the time so she is not caught. In a depressing bit of circular beaurocracy, her husband Rabia (the one with legal status in Israel) requests a permit for her and is told he must file for Family Reunification but that no requests are being taken at this time and she cannot be given any other sort of document because she needs the one of family reuinification.

For the older couple on the film Kifach and Yazeed, the solution is to stay in Berlin until the law changes and they can go home. Kifach struggles to learn German and at the same time, she must be in Israel for part of the year so she does not lost her status as is threatened in one municipal office. She had been very active in the struggle for coexistence in Israel and has many photos with major Israeli political figures such as Shulamit Aloni and Ehud Barak. Her husband views Barak as slime and does not want to see the photo, there is elegant symmetry in the film as Kifach later confronts Barak at a conference in Berlin about this law keeping families apart.

There is also a beautiful symmetry as the film ends with both families giving birth to children.

It is a complex issue. The situations these people are in are terrible. They are being kept from having a family with the person they love in their homes. The Israeli government believes that this horrible law may be saving someone’s life; it feels it must ignore the fact that it is also adding much misery to many innocent civilians.

The law was ammended so that women above the age of 25 and men above the age of 35 may now apply for family reunification. The director was at the screening and gave the update that Suhad was about to have her birthday and would more than likely obtain family reuinification and that Kifach’s struggle continues as well.

It makes me feel lucky that all I have to deal with is a bunch of paperwork and a $1000 fee for a fiancee visa to the UK. Our revolution was a really long time ago. (Though, it does suck that the price doubled as of April 1st of this year.)

There is a great summary of the Israeli law involved from a recent Jerusalem Post article (Background: Terror plot may have blown family reunification By DAN IZENBERG, April 11, 2007) :

“Prohibitions on family reunification were first introduced by the Interior Ministry on April 1, 2002, following the suicide bombing at the Matza restaurant in Haifa’s Neveh Sha’anan neighborhood in which 15 Israelis were killed. The driver of the car bomb was a Hamas terrorist who had married an Israeli and carried a blue identity card.

Initially, the freeze on family reunification was total. No Palestinian who married an Israeli could begin the five-year process for obtaining residential rights or citizenship, and those who were in the middle of the process could not advance.

On July 31, 2003, the Knesset turned the administrative decision into a one-year law, which was periodically extended.

On July 27, 2005, the law was amended so that Palestinian women above the age of 25 and men above 35 could live with their Israeli spouses if they met security criteria. Younger Palestinians were still barred from living in Israel.

On March 21, 2007, the law was amended again and extended until July 2008. The current law provides a humanitarian committee to consider exceptional requests for family reunification from women under 25 and men under 35, but toughens the security criteria and extends the restrictions to spouses from countries classified as enemy.

The law in all its forms has been harshly criticized by human rights groups in Israel and abroad. In May, the High Court narrowly rejected a petition to overrule it in its second version. The Association for Civil Rights in Israel, Meretz MK Zehava Gal-On and the Israeli-Arab rights group Adalah have already declared they will petition against the newly amended law.

The human rights groups claim the law violates the fundamental right of every citizen to a family and is motivated by Jewish demographic concerns. The law prevents roughly 20,000 Palestinians from living in Israel with their Israeli spouses and also prevents them from raising families in Israel.

The government insists the temporary law is based on security considerations. Granting Palestinians Israeli identity cards and the right to unrestricted freedom of movement throughout Israel is dangerous, officials say.”

UPDATE: 29 Oct. 07: Israel to approve some 3,400 requests for family unification in one-time action

Democracy on Deadline

Ages ago I did some freelance translation work for a documentary – it was rebroadcast on PBS today. Democracy on Deadline tells the stories of reporters in danger zones. I did translation from Hebrew to English for the Israel/Palestine part of the film. They cover the Haaretz newspaper during a time I was working for the English-language edition entertainment guide.

PBS site here
Reviews here and here.
ITVS page with discussion guide
Film Credits
DVD for Sale
DVD for Sale

For Your Consideration

Went to see a preview screening of Christopher Guest‘s new film For Your Consideration at Lincoln Center‘s Walter Reade Theater. I dragged Nick away from work to go. Christopher Guest, Eugene Levy (and his eyebrows), Catherine O’Hara, Parker Posey and Harry Shearer were in attendance. In the spirit of his previous mockumentarys, it is part-scripted by Guest and Eugene Levy and part-improvised by the stupendous and large cast of actors. It’s about Hollywood and what happens when a small film “Home for Purim” gets some Oscar Buzz. [On the official site of For Your Consideration - Click on Home for Purim for it's "official site." Nick heard the actors singing along to the film - the song it plays - in the theater lobby on a bathroom run.]

Spoiler Alert: Midway through the film the title gets changed to “Home for Thanksgiving” An audience member asked if this was based on events that had happened to the panel. Response from Christopher Guest: These things have happened in Hollywood. Not many people know that “Star Wars” started out as “Home for Purim.” Yoda was a Mohel. There’s also a snippet in the film where they make fun of Charlie Rose‘s interview style. Christopher Guest is asked if he is worried about being on the show. His response is a deadpan “I’ve been on Charlie Rose…I’ve been on Charlie Rose.” The group also commented on the talent of fellow actor Fred Willard – let him do his thing and stand back. Parker Posey commented on the difference between working wiith Christopher Guest as opposed to a clueless director who asks you to throw in some random improv into a scene. The actors in the film came in their own costume and character development choices within the framework of the film and on occasion surprised their costars who had to work with, react, improv with what was brought. Another story about the evening here.

After that went with Nick to get 99 Cent Pizza on 41st and Ninth Ave. It is across from a homeless center and a homeless gentleman asked us for some spare change to get a slice. Nick gave him enough for a slice and a half or two. He then suggested I should marry Nick – a good catch. Nick is great and I hope he finds his special someone.

The Beautiful South, The Darien Dilemma, Hebrew lesson and a damn fine apple tart at Bistro 60

Last night was amazing!! Went to a free acoustic set by The Beautiful South. It was at a tiny venue on the Lower East Side called Cake Shop. Their website’s calendar is coy. I got the headsup from Oh My Rockness – a great list for keeping up with alterna-indie shows in NYC. They played new songs from their new CD Superbi which is really good and the played classics like Old Red Eyes Is Back, Prettiest Eyes, Perfect 10, Rotterdam and Don’t Marry Her. Paul Heaton even did a little poetry reading.

The Darien Dilemma

The Darien Dilemma

Then I went to see a great documentary, The Darien Dilemma, at Makor as part of their Reel Jews festival. A father and his filmmaker son explore the previously untold story of 1,000 Viennese Jews stranded on the frozen Danube River in 1941 as they awaited their would-be rescuer, Ruth Klieger, an agent of the newly created Mossad.

Erez Laufer weaves together interviews with the survivors, archival film, dramatic re-enactments (including scenes of the actors’ preparation – it seems like they stand in for the audience while they get inside the characters’ heads.) and footage of his father the screenwriter.

The director Erez Laufer was at the screening. He notes that the footage of a ship in the film is actually from a ship that set sail a few months prior to the Darien that was shot by a Hungarian sailor, but photos (of youth groups and a massacre) are original and directly linked to the story. Both in the film and in person he explains that his father started looking at archives to find out more about his own history and how his mother escaped Europe with him as a small child.

His father then became intrigued by this story of Ruth Klieger and partially with her reported beauty and alleged affair with David Ben-Gurion. She remained in Israel, worked as a PR person for shipping company ZIM and died in Tel Aviv in 1979.

The film is about her, and not less so about the filmmaker’s father. Through this film many survivors who were interviewed learned a fuller story of what happened when they were brought to Palestine.

It is worth seeing – it is made in an interesting way and tells a compelling and little-known story. Note to documentary filmmakers: Include your notes, interviews, arguments with your father the screenwriter…realize how much central characters may not know about what happened to them….You can buy tickets for December screenings on Makor’s website.

After the film I met Jocelyn and Lee at Bistro 60 for dessert. We had Tarte Tatin – Apple tart with crème fraîche. This is an amazing dessert. We devoured it – moaning all the way. Learned that Hebrew for “to moan” is גניחה – Geniha. Lee was shocked we didn’t know this word. Jocelyn’s response – I’m more of a screamer.

my flickr: The Beautiful South at Cake Shop

Cake Shop The Beautiful South at Cake Shop The Beautiful South at Cake Shop The Beautiful South at Cake Shop Paul Heaton and Me at Cake Shop