
By Kerry Smith
Showcasing a diverse and innovative selection of Palestinian films from around the world, the Palestine Film Festival is a cinematic journey of creative, thought-provoking storytelling.
This year marks the 11th edition of the festival in Australia, and follows a temporary pause over the past few years due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The festival is part of a thriving Palestinian film industry working to facilitate Palestinian cultural output while strengthening social and economic ties between Palestine and Australia. It includes a broad selection of films:
Boycott (2021), which traces the impact of state legislation in the United States designed to penalise individuals and companies that choose to boycott Israel due to its human rights record;
Fadia’s Tree (2022), which tells the story of a Palestinian refugee in Lebanon, stranded by history on the wrong side of the border, yearning for the ancestral homeland she is denied;
Little Palestine, Diary of a Seige (2021), a filmed diary of the daily life in the biggest Palestinian refugee camp – Yarmouk, in Damascus, Syria and its besieged inhabitants, who decided to face bombing, displacement and hunger with rallying, study, music, love and joy;
Hommus: A story of appropriation (2020), is emblematic of Palestinians’ loss of land, dignity, and identity. Set against the backdrop of the Israeli appropriation of hummus as quintessential to Israeli cuisine, Palestinian-American filmmaker Lafi Abood captures the lives of ordinary Palestinians in Jerusalem.
The festival runs from November 2-20.
Sydney: November 2‒10
Melbourne: November 3‒6
Brisbane: November 11‒13
Canberra: November 11‒13
Perth: November 11‒13
Adelaide: November 18‒20
Hobart: November 18‒20
For more information and to book tickets, visit www.palestinianfilmfestival.com.au.
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Republished with permission from GreenLeft
This post was previously published on greenleft.org.au.
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Photo credit: iStockPhoto.com
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