The Dead of Jaffa by veteran TV filmmaker, Ram Loevy, is a hard-hitting feature
film about how our contemporary reality is haunted by those who have come before
us, in this case specifically the Arabs of Jaffa who lived during the British
Mandatory period of 1948.
The story is about Rita and her husband George who is the
proprietor of a small shop. One day,
three children from a small West Bank town near Hebron are smuggled into Israel
and dropped off at their house. Their
mother is dead and their father is serving a life sentence in an Israeli prison.
Rita and George are told that these are the children of a distant relative. Whether they are or they aren’t, George is
terribly worried about the risks involved in harboring three undocumented
children. But George and Rita are childless and Rita is not willing to give up
the children so easily.
The two younger children are happy to become part of George
and Rita’s household. But the older boy,
whose political consciousness is already developing, has moved out of their
house into an abandoned house next door.
George tells him that this is where dead people live, which we take to understand
that it belonged to Palestinians who left in 1948. As the boy looks out of the window, he magically
witnesses the 1948 period, and watches as Palestinians in traditional dress are
moving around, preparing for a celebration.
A whirling dervish begins to dance, and is supernaturally flying above. These figures are not actually ghosts from
the past, rather they are part of a foreign film which is being shot in the old
part of Jaffa – a romance about what it was like living under British
occupation during the 1948 period.
George is cast as a distinguished Palestinian doctor and we
watch as his character is shot and killed, in multiple takes, by a British
soldier. This is not the strongest part
of the film, perhaps because Ram Loevy has purposefully created the film-within-a-film
to look somewhat stiff as a reflection of the lack of understanding of the
foreign filmmaker. The tension between
the historical period and the modern one reaches a climax when a staged
anti-British demonstration gets out of hand and becomes a violent demonstration
against the Israeli occupation. This is
when the viewer realizes how the memory of the trauma and hardships of 1948 is actually
part and parcel of the contemporary reality.
Ram Loevy is known for his wide array of films dealing with difficult
political and social issues including discrimination, poverty, economic and
social inequality, and difficulties between Arabs and Jews. Loevy is perhaps best known for his 1978
made-for-TV film, Khirbet Hiza’a, based on the story by S. Yizhar
(an author of the Palach generation). The film is set during the 1948 War of
Independence between Israel and the surrounding Arab states, in which Israeli
soldiers forcibly deport the citizens of an entire Arab village. Remarkable for its honesty and openness at a
time when the onscreen examination of Arab-Israeli issues was still rare, the film
portrays the impotence of one soldier who challenges the others about what they
are doing, but is quickly silenced by another soldier’s vision of the Land of
Israel becoming filled with inevitable waves of Jewish refugees who will
replace the “fleeing” Arabs.
The Dead of Jaffa is available from Laila
Films.
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