Loading...
Loading...
We use strictly necessary cookies to run ShowSeeker, and — only with your consent — optional cookies for analytics and session replay that help us improve the app. Read our Privacy Policy

Gaza Ghetto: Portrait of a Family, 1948 – 1984 is a documentary film about the life of a Palestinian family living in the Jabalia refugee camp. The film, created by Joan Mandell, Pea Holmquist, and Pierre Bjorklund in 1984 is believed to be the first documentary ever made in Gaza. The film features Ariel Sharon, Binyamin Ben-Eliezer and soldiers on patrol "candidly discuss[ing] their responsibilities." The film follows a refugee family from the Gaza Strip who visit the site of their former village, now a Jewish town in Israel. As the grandfather and great-grandfather point out an orchard and sycamore fig that belonged to Muhammed Ayyub and Uncle Khalil, an Israeli resident appears and tells them to leave, claiming they need a permit to be there. The mother tells him that, "We work in Jaffa and Tel Aviv and that's not forbidden," to which he replies, "Here it's forbidden."

I Am Heath Ledger

Louis Theroux: The Settlers

The Class of ‘92

Fuck

Five Broken Cameras

Harry Dean Stanton: Partly Fiction

Love, Gilda

To Be Takei

Audrey

As I Was Moving Ahead, Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty

Love, Antosha

Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson

Fertile Memory

Waltz with Bashir

Until the Sky Falls Quiet

UNraveling UNRWA

To Die For Palestine

Undressing Israel: Gay Men in the Promised Land

The Occupation of the American Mind

Gaza: Trapped in Hell

Severed

Torn: The Israel-Palestine Poster War on New York City Streets

Gaza, Since October 7

World War C