Focus on Tel Aviv draws protests 2Sep09 September 4, 2009
by Michael Posner - The Globe and Mail - 2 September 2009
An international group of more than 50 prominent filmmakers, writers, artists and academics â including Ken Loach, David Byrne, Naomi Klein, Alice Walker, Jane Fonda, Wallace Shawn and Danny Glover â has signed a letter protesting the Toronto International Film Festivalâs decision to spotlight the city of Tel Aviv and the work of 10 Israeli filmmakers.
The letter is to be published online Thursday, with a call for additional signatories.
âAs members of the Canadian and international film, culture and media arts communities, we are deeply disturbed by [TIFFâs] decision to host a celebratory spotlight on Tel Aviv,â the letter begins. âWe protest that TIFF, whether intentionally or not, has become complicit in the Israeli propaganda machine.â
The letter, coming on the virtual eve of the festivalâs 34th edition, follows Canadian filmmaker John Greysonâs decision last week to pull his short documentary, Covered, from the TIFF lineup to protest the festivalâs decision to launch its new City to City program by focusing on Tel Aviv.
âWe do not protest the individual Israeli filmmakers included in City to City,â the new letter states. âNor do we in any way suggest that Israeli films should be unwelcome at TIFF. However ⌠we object to the use of such an important international festival in staging a propaganda campaign on behalf of ⌠an apartheid regime.â
The new missive contends that TIFF organizers have, wittingly or unwittingly, been complicit in a million-dollar âBrand Israelâ PR campaign to change negative perceptions of the state of Israel.
The artists allege that the campaign is designed to âtake the focus off Israelâs treatment of Palestiniansâ and refocus it on achievements in medicine, science and culture.
The letter includes endorsements by several Israeli filmmakers and at least one Palestinian- Israeli director, Elia Suleiman, with a film in this yearâs festival â The Time that Remains. He is not, however, withdrawing the film.
Last week, responding to Greysonâs protest, TIFF co-director Cameron Bailey insisted that the Israeli government had played no role in developing the new program.
âThere was no pressure from any outside source,â wrote Mr. Bailey, in a letter posted on the TIFF website. âThis focus is a product only of TIFFâs programming decisions. We value that independence and would never compromise it.â A TIFF spokesman today declined to add to that statement.
However, two other Canadian filmmakers, producer Robert Lantos and Emmy-award winning documentarian Simcha Jacobovici, weighed in.
â[TIFF] deserves applause for its refusal to cater to the agenda of biased individuals with an axe to grind,â Mr. Lantos said in a statement.
Mr. Lantos, currently overseeing production of Barneyâs Version, the Mordecai Richler novel, said Mr. Greysonâs âhypocrisy is mind-boggling. Israel is the only state in the Middle East where films are made freely and without censorship of any sort [and] the only country in the region where a gay positive film like Mr. Greysonâs could be produced and freely shownâ
Mr. Jacobovici, a Toronto filmmaker who recently moved with his family to Israel, noted in a statement that the Palestinian government in Gaza had recently called a U.N. proposal to teach the Holocaust in Palestinian schools a war crime. âWhy does Greyson want to align himself with Holocaust deniers?â
Shmulik Maoz, an Israeli director whose much-acclaimed film Lebanon will play at TIFF, said today that âfilm festivals should be aboveâ discussions about boycotts and protests. âTrying to shut peopleâs mouths is not smart. In any event, most of the filmmakers in the City to City program are as critical of the Israeli government as anybody.â
Many of the voices protesting TIFFâs focus on Tel Aviv are part of a wider campaign, the Palestinian- led Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement. Among them is Toronto writer and political activist Naomi Klein who said today that it âstrains credulityâ to think that TIFFâs decision to spotlight Tel Aviv was not connected to the Israeli PR campaign. Such a programming decision âfeeds Israelâs foreign policy goals and presents Israeli society as more diverse and open than it actually is,â she said.
A more nuanced position perhaps was voiced by Berkeley filmmaker Deborah Kaufman, who said in an e-mail statement that while the Brand Israel campaign âblurs the line between public relations and crass propaganda,â the City to City program included Assi Dayanâs brilliant Life According to Agfa, âwhich I see as an attack on the entire Zionist enterprise, and Eytan Foxâs The Bubble, a provocative fantasia on failed dreams,â films that allow âaudiences to make their own judgments about Israeli politics.â
âI also want to push change,â Ms. Kaufman said. âBut I feel our strength as film activists is to promote debate and critical thought through engagement, not silencing.â
Thank You.