LOG LINE
A French/Palestinian filmmaker is detained
in
Bethlehem
and documents her attempt to fight the Israeli system.
SYNOPSIS:
Norma Marcos is a French critic, filmmaker
and journalist of Palestinian origins. She lives in
Paris but was born in the
Palestine
territories, where she frequently works. While
traveling to Palestine to begin production on a new
film project, Marcos was denied entry into Israel
through Ben-Gurion Airport and detained by Israeli
authorities. She was held in a jail and later under
house arrest in Bethlehem, her home town. Marcos
insisted the charges against her were false and she
ended up sending seven weeks trapped in Bethlehem
while waiting for her case to be sorted out. Marcos
began filming her new surroundings with a mini-DV
camera, and shooting interviews with one of her
occasional visitors, her seven-year-old niece, Yara.
“I shot Waiting for Ben-Gurion spontaneously during a time
when I was put in prison at Ben-Gurion airport in
Israel. While
everyone was telling me to give up resisting the
Israeli Authorities due to the hopelessness of the
situation, I decided to psychologically resist the
illegal treatment that I was facing as a French
citizen of Palestinian origins, by choosing to remain
aware of the relativity of both internal and external
limitation.“
Marcos fashioned her DV footage into this
documentary film, Waiting for Ben-Gurion, which
blends her jailbird's eye view of
Bethlehem with a child's perspective on life in the
Middle East. |