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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Colleen Wright
November 19, 2001
Marketing Communications Account Executive
Telephone: (410) 581-4293
E-mail: colleenwright@mpt.org
MPT. This is bigger than television
Promises provides extraordinary window into minds and hearts
of Jerusalem's children
P.O.V. documentary premieres December 13, 2001 on MPT
OWINGS MILLS, MD: On December 13 at 9 p.m., as part of the 2001
season of P.O.V., public television's groundbreaking showcase of independent,
non-fiction films, Maryland Public Television airs "Promises."
This poignant account of the bitter and historically complex struggle
of war and peace in the Middle East is told from the point of view of
seven Israeli and Palestinian children. The award-winning documentary
provides a window into the minds and hearts of Jerusalem's children on
both sides of the checkpoints that divide the area. Their detailed and
intimate accounts offer personal, emotional and sometimes hilarious insight
into their experiences.
Between 1997 and the summer of 2000, three filmmakers went to Jerusalem
to ask children what they thought about war and peace in the Middle East.
The result, a riveting documentary called "Promises," is a prescient
account of the bitter and historically complex struggle from the point
of view of those who will inherit it. The film does not focus on news
and current events, rather, the children's detailed and intimate accounts
offer personal, emotional, and sometimes hilarious insight into their
experiences.
Goldberg, returning to Jerusalem where he spent his youth, talks with
children on both sides of the checkpoints that divide the area. Some of
the seven Israeli and Palestinian children the film focuses on reside
only minutes away from one another but are nevertheless worlds apart.
Ten-year-old Moishe is the son of a settler family and dreams of being
Israel's first "religious" prime minister. Eleven-year-old Mahmoud
lives in Jerusalem's Old City, which allows him access denied other Palestinians.
He prays for the liberation of Palestine at one of Islam's holiest shrines,
the Al-Aqsa Mosque on the fiercely disputed 'Temple Mount' or 'Haram Al-Sharif'.
Just below the mosque, 13-year-old rabbi-in-training Shlomo prays at Judaism's
holiest site, the Western Wall.
The Israeli twins, Yarko and Daniel, come from a secular Israeli family.
Their Holocaust-survivor grandfather is a link to the generation that
founded the modern state of Israel. Not fifteen minutes by car from the
twins, Faraj lives in the Deheishe refugee camp with his grandmother,
who still treasures the key to her house that was destroyed in the 1948
war. Sanabel is also a refugee; the assertive daughter of liberal secular
Palestinians, whose journalist father was held in an Israeli jail without
trial for two years.
At first, the children repeat the ingrained attitudes of their elders,
though with the surprising candor and insight that young people often
bring to descriptions of adult affairs. As in the adult world, the children's
thinking - and their hopes for a more peaceful future - seem to be at
an impasse. Then the story takes a surprising turn when the twins and
Faraj, who have shown growing curiosity about each other, decide to cross
the checkpoints to meet in person. The encounters that follow offer an
extraordinary demonstration of the human dimensions of the Middle East
conflict, and of the weight of history on a young generation struggling
to see a way forward.
"When I was covering the first Intifada in 1988 as a journalist,
I was stunned the first time I saw Palestinian children playing the 'Intifada
game'," says co-director/producer Goldberg. "Some would play
'Israeli soldiers' and others 'Palestinian protestors,' and they would
re-enact the whole thing - stone throwing, arrests, beatings. That planted
a seed to make a film about the kids on both sides."
Co-director/producer Shapiro adds, "My deepest motivation for making
this film was I wanted so much to convey to an audience that 'Palestinian'
does not equal 'terrorist' and
'Israeli' does not equal 'soldier' and the people living in Israel and
the Palestinian Territories are not monsters. The children in "Promises"
wake us up. They are candid, articulate and funny, and it is through them
that we discover a deeper, more dimensional view of both Palestinians
and Israelis."
For more information on P.O.V. "Promises," as well as other
MPT on- and off-air programs, visit mpt.org.
Maryland Public Television is a not-for-profit, state-licensed public
television station which serves the citizens and communities of Maryland
and beyond through a variety of broadcast and nonbroadcast activities.
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