-
US commerce chief admits Epstein Island lunch but denies closer ties
-
Mayor of Ecuador's biggest city arrested for money laundering
-
Farhan, spinners lead Pakistan to easy USA win in T20 World Cup
-
Stocks mixed as muted US retail sales spur caution
-
Macron wants more EU joint borrowing: Could it happen?
-
Shiffrin flops at Winter Olympics as helmet row simmers
-
No excuses for Shiffrin after Olympic team combined flop
-
Pool on wheels brings swim lessons to rural France
-
Europe's Ariane 6 to launch Amazon constellation satellites into orbit
-
Could the digital euro get a green light in 2026?
-
Spain's Telefonica sells Chile unit in Latin America pullout
-
'We've lost everything': Colombia floods kill 22
-
Farhan propels Pakistan to 190-9 against USA in T20 World Cup
-
US to scrap cornerstone of climate regulation this week
-
Nepal call for India, England, Australia to play in Kathmandu
-
Stocks rise but lacklustre US retail sales spur caution
-
Olympic chiefs let Ukrainian athlete wear black armband at Olympics after helmet ban
-
French ice dancers poised for Winter Olympics gold amid turmoil
-
Norway's Ruud wins error-strewn Olympic freeski slopestyle
-
More Olympic pain for Shiffrin as Austria win team combined
-
Itoje returns to captain England for Scotland Six Nations clash
-
Sahara celebrates desert cultures at Chad festival
-
US retail sales flat in December as consumers pull back
-
Bumper potato harvests spell crisis for European farmers
-
Bangladesh's PM hopeful Rahman warns of 'huge' challenges ahead
-
Guardiola seeks solution to Man City's second half struggles
-
Shock on Senegalese campus after student dies during police clashes
-
US vice president Vance on peace bid in Azerbaijan after Armenia visit
-
'Everything is destroyed': Ukrainian power plant in ruins after Russian strike
-
Shiffrin misses out on Olympic combined medal as Austria win
-
EU lawmakers back plans for digital euro
-
Starmer says UK govt 'united', presses on amid Epstein fallout
-
Olympic chiefs offer repairs after medals break
-
Moscow chokes Telegram as it pushes state-backed rival app
-
ArcelorMittal confirms long-stalled French steel plant revamp
-
New Zealand set new T20 World Cup record partnership to crush UAE
-
Norway's Ruud wins Olympic freeski slopestyle gold after error-strewn event
-
USA's Johnson gets new gold medal after Olympic downhill award broke
-
Von Allmen aims for third gold in Olympic super-G
-
Liverpool need 'perfection' to reach Champions League, admits Slot
-
Spotify says active users up 11 percent in fourth quarter to 751 mn
-
AstraZeneca profit jumps as cancer drug sales grow
-
Waseem's 66 enables UAE to post 173-6 against New Zealand
-
Stocks mostly rise tracking tech, earnings
-
Say cheese! 'Wallace & Gromit' expo puts kids into motion
-
BP profits slide awaiting new CEO
-
USA's Johnson sets up Shiffrin for tilt at Olympic combined gold
-
Trump tariffs hurt French wine and spirits exports
-
Bangladesh police deploy to guard 'risky' polling centres
-
OpenAI starts testing ads in ChatGPT
Film on Israel's 1948 war shows Palestinian agony: director
Jordanian film "Farha", vehemently criticised in Israel, is based on true events and represents "only a drop in the ocean" of Palestinian suffering, director Darin J. Sallam told AFP.
Released last month on Netflix, "Farha" depicts atrocities against Palestinians during the 1948 conflict following Israel's creation, which Palestinians call the Nakba, or "catastrophe".
The Arabic-language film tells the story of a Palestinian teenager, Farha, whose village comes under attack by Israeli forces.
Her father hides her and, through a crack in a door, she witnesses the execution a family of Palestinian civilians, including two girls.
Sallam, 35, said the plot for her first full-length feature was inspired by a story told to her by her mother, about a Palestinian woman named Radiyeh.
The film recounts "the story of a girl who had been forced to abandon her dreams because of events she had no control over", Sallam said.
"Farha" featured in the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival and has won a dozen awards in other festivals.
In Israel, where discussion of alleged atrocities during the 1948 war remains largely taboo, officials condemned Netflix over the decision to stream the film.
"I wanted to open the world's eyes to this pivotal moment in the history... and to show that this land was not without people," Sallam said, of what is now Israel and the Palestinian territories.
"Rather, it was a land with people who had lives, dreams, hopes and history."
- 'I am Farha' -
The film was shot in the northern Jordan towns of Ajlun and Al-Fuhais, which resemble the Palestinian village where Farha's story begins.
The teenage girl tries to persuade her father to let her complete her studies in the city, prepares for a friend's wedding, and picks figs before her village is attacked.
Sallam said she avoided showing violence, with the exception of the unarmed family's killing.
"This scene, which shook the Israeli government, is only a drop in the ocean of the suffering of millions of Palestinians during the Nakba," she said.
Sallam called for more filmmakers to explore this painful chapter in Palestinian history, which "almost never appears in cinema".
Her mother, of Syrian origin, had heard Radiyeh's story at a refugee camp in that country and passed it on to her, "and I decided to make a film and share it".
"Radiyeh had been locked up by her father who feared for her, and when she was finally able to come out of hiding she went to Syria," Sallam said. "That's where she told the story to my mother."
The filmmaker said she had "lost all contact with this woman", a resident of the war-ravaged Palestinian refugee camp of Yarmouk, north of Damascus, since fighting in Syria began in 2011.
After one screening of the film in the United States, an audience member spoke to Sallam.
"A woman aged in her eighties who had survived the Nakba told me: 'I am Farha'", she said.
- 'Lies' -
Former Israeli minister Avigdor Lieberman, who had served in government until Benjamin Netanyahu returned to power last month, said in November the film's "whole purpose is to create a false pretence and incite against Israeli soldiers".
Chili Tropper, Israel's former culture minister, said "Farha" shows "lies and libels".
For Sallam, whose father is Palestinian, "denying the Nakba is denying my existence, denying the tragedy of millions of people."
"My own father survived the Nakba. He... fled to Jordan with his parents."
Sallam's father was born in Ramle, in what is now central Israel.
Most of its Arab residents fled or were forced from their homes during the 1948 conflict, as were more than 760,000 Palestinians across the country.
Many of their descendants live to this day in Jordan, Syria and Lebanon.
More than half of Jordan's population of about 10 million people are of Palestinian origin, the result of mass displacement in 1948 and during the 1967 Six-Day War, when Israel occupied the West Bank and east Jerusalem.
Last year, Israeli director Alon Schwarz faced backlash over his documentary on an alleged 1948 massacre of Palestinians in Tantura, a Mediterranean village in the northwest of what is now Israel.
Calls have mounted in recent years, including among Israeli activists, for greater transparency about the conduct of nascent Israeli forces during the 1948 conflict.
X.Karnes--AMWN