During the summer of 2011, Israel saw a major social protest
which arose from a groundswell of young people trying to battle the high cost
of living, especially the high cost of housing.
At that time, Daphni Leef was a film student who was having trouble
paying her rent, so she decided to give up her apartment and pitched a tent on
Rothschild Blvd., inviting others to join her via facebook. Little did she know what she was getting
into!
Slowly the movement grew, until it took on major
proportions, which literally hundreds of thousands joined from all over
Israel. The slogan of the movement was
“The People want Social Justice” and Daphni Leef found herself at the center of
this almost uncontrollable event.
The opening film at the DOCAVIV film festival, a few days
ago, was the documentary film, Before My Feet Touch the Ground (לפני
שהרגלים נוגעות בקרקע) directed by Daphni Leef. This compelling film is both about her and about the
movement. It is a highly personal piece,
as the filmmaker has decided to turn the camera on herself, so that we can see
how one person is affected as she is trying to change the world. We see moments
of great satisfaction and moments of despair, frustration, issues of ego, even
some violence. Eventually the tent city
was shut down by the authorities. This
film provides an introspective look at herself, at what she went through, how
she put herself on the line, how so many people were counting on her, and how
it all just literally fizzled out.
One minister in the right-wing government (Miri Regev) called
the protesters left-wing radicals, because they shouted so much and wouldn’t
let her speak when she came to the tent camp.
It was a funny moment, because there was no political side in this social
protest movement, and also because it has become a regular slogan of the
current government to blame everything on the left as if it is a dirty word!
Leef concludes the film with a mantra: “Open your eyes,
close your eyes.” Open your eyes and see the inequality and the need for
change. Close your eyes and hide from
the burden, the responsibility. At the
end, you are left dreaming – we must continue to dream – and we want to know
where a charismatic woman such as Daphni Leef is going from here!
Before My Feet Touch the Ground is a documentary
film, 87 minutes in length.
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