From Challenge # 63
VIDEO '48 presents its first film, a fifty-minute documentary on Ramya"Not in My Garden!"![]() ![]() A round-table conversation with members of the new film group, Video '48, moderated by Roni Ben Efrat Participants: Shiri Wilk. Studied four years at Camera Obscura, a college for the visual media. High school teacher in Communications, specializing in Video Documentary, Photography, and Editing. Nir Nader. Artist. Graduate of Camera Obscura. Major in still photography. Yonatan Ben Efrat. Completed program in Digital Media at the Open University. Yoram Amuyal. Studied Directing of Documentary Films and Video Photography at Camera Obscura. Conducts workshops with children. Roni: Video '48 was initiated by Hanitzotz Publishing House (HPH), which till now has kept to the printed media. Why then video? And why Video '48? Yonatan: We want to document the situation of Palestinians who
remained within Israel after the war of 1948. When it comes to documentation
nothing surpasses video.
One of our aims at Video '48 is to get to the point where we can all
work in Arabic. This is necessary if we are to open our ranks to more Arabs.
With us they won't have to subscribe to phony formulas committing them
to preserve "the democratic and Jewish character of the state of Israel."
At the summer camp (see article, p.20) we organized a group of participants to document what they'd learned and experienced. The result is a ten-minute video clip that we want to show to children elsewhere this year. This summer camp is the kind of thing that I mean by "cultural alternative". It was a great success. Roni: The first major film you've chosen to do is "Not in My Garden!" - a film about Ramya, an unrecognized village. Why? Shiri: Because the plight of the Arab population shows up there
in its most extreme form. What could be more extreme than people living
in tin shacks right next to people living in palaces of stone? Also, the
legal limbo is extreme. Everything's gone to an extreme at Ramya, and it's
easy to bring this out in a film.
Roni: What are the elements that make this story dramatic? Nir: There are many. Here you have the State of Israel in 1991 trying to push these people off their land, telling the court, in writing, that it needed this land in order to build homes for Jewish immigrants. (For a full chronology of the Ramya story, see Challenge # 46, pp. 11-12. - Ed.) The story is very representative. Above all, it represents the central conflict in Israel, which sees itself as a state of the Jewish people - with the inconvenience of having Palestinians within its borders. What we see is a village that had been there since the British mandate, which Israel refused to recognize - refused, therefore, to provide with basic infrastructure and services - a village that no one outside the immediate area had even heard about until 1991. After Hanitzotz took up its cause, Ramya became known in Israel and the world. (The New York Times and The Washington Post carried the story. The report of the US State Department on Human Rights also singled out
Ramya. - Ed.) In the meantime, around it arose the Jewish city of Carmiel,
which didn't exist thirty-six years ago. Today it almost completely surrounds
Ramya. That's a very dramatic basis. When Carmiel was founded, expressly
for the purpose of "judaizing" Galilee, the Ramyans were just making the
transition from their Beduin tents to tin shacks, and since then they've
had to stay in those shacks. As if time has stopped for them. In contrast,
Carmiel has been growing in leaps and bounds. It's become one of the centers
of hi-tech in Israel. This city has all the power and governmental backing
to do whatever it pleases. It has the law and the bulldozers.
Roni: Could you describe the Ramya agreement? Nir: The premise of Israel's land establishment was that the Ramyans should all move to another Arab village in order to make room for Jewish immigrants. When the campaign of Hanitzotz sidetracked this plan, the authorities, with the help of the Arab leaders, persuaded the Ramyans to sign an agreement in 1995: they were to move 150 meters to the west, where they would receive the infrastructure for an Arab neighborhood within Carmiel. They would lose a certain amount of land, but they would gain the elements of civilization, such as a paved road, piped water and electricity. So what was the catch? The agreement failed to specify the timing. There
was no commitment by Carmiel to build the new Ramya neighborhood before
taking over the land. Now the villagers are still in the same tin shacks,
but the high-rises of Carmiel are popping up out of Ramya's ground. Meanwhile,
the prospective neighborhood is just a dark spot on the map. Of course
the moment the agreement was made, you could tell it was fishy: If Ramya
is to be a neighborhood within Carmiel, why not leave it where it is and
build the Jewish neighborhood 150 meters to the west? This would
have shown the Arab population that Israel is becoming less racist. Instead,
in our film you hear Adi Eldar, the mayor of Carmiel, telling us, "I'm
humanitarian. I gave them a water pipe, and I also arranged transportation
for a crippled girl." But he didn't fulfil the promise made in the agreement.
Here the authorities have gone and built a huge new neighborhood - one
thousand apartments - some of them on Ramya's land. Why couldn't they have
thrown in, while they were at it, the tiny bit of infrastructure they'd
promised the Ramyans? They could have, of course, with no trouble at all
- if they'd had any intention of allowing an Arab neighborhood in Carmiel.
Roni: A tale of defeat?
Roni: Yoram, as I understand it, you helped conduct a video workshop for the Ramya children. They put on a play and filmed it, and that film is woven into the larger one. Yoram: The idea was to have the children make a little film that would be part of the big film about the place. We took a folktale that's extremely relevant. Two brothers inherit a goat. They argue, because each wants the goat to himself. At last they decide to go to the king and let him judge between them. By the time their trial date comes, the goat is dead, but that doesn't stop them: they argue about who should get the skin. When they stand before the king and he hears their story, he says: "God took the goat. And since I'm God's representative on earth, I'll take the skin!" Then he dismisses them. We put on this show with lots of fun and festivity. We worked hard on
the costumes, which are full of color. On the other hand, I think the kids
understood through the whole production that this is very much their story,
a story of disunity inside and domination from outside - a very hard story,
despite all the color. They were extremely conscious of joining in the
struggle of the adults to remain on the land. They understand that it will
be their task to continue the fight.
Roni: Wasn't it a kind of culture shock to introduce video into a place that doesn't even have electricity? Nir: They have to start a generator to watch TV, but they do
have TV. They see very well what modern life offers: at the end of their
dirt road a paved one begins. The children know what they lack. And because
they are children like all children, the minute that school lets out -
they go to school in a recognized village - they have a tremendous thirst
for something out of the ordinary. At the beginning of the year, Hanitzotz
members from the Baqa Center in Majd al-Krum opened up an after-school
tutoring center for the children of Ramya. Until then there hadn't been
anything at all. The kids used to play with stones or spend the afternoons
trapping birds. Of course, to someone from Tel Aviv whose kids go from
one hi-tech club to another, this may seem nice and authentic, "back-to-nature",
but playing with stones and trapping birds is not enough today. So the
thirst was tremendous. When Yoram went to work with them, I think he found
it very easy.
Roni.: What plans do you have for the film? Nir: We want to screen it wherever we can. We want to sell it
to the TV networks in this country, in the Arab world and abroad. We want
to show it at festivals. But we also want to work with it inside the Arab
and Jewish communities. This is a film that opens up a great many questions
for discussion.
Roni: Does anyone want to sum things up? Yonatan: At the start of the film, Intisar, a girl from Ramya, tells the children the story of David Ben Gurion, who visited Galilee in the fifties and asked the people accompanying him, "Am I in an Arab country?" The founding of Carmiel in 1964 was part of the Zionist attempt to outstrip the Arab majority there. Carmiel is very proud of its cultural work. It hosts an international dance festival every year. We end the film with shots from this festival. We see dancers carrying oddly shaped pieces of Styrofoam, which they put together on stage into a monstrous bust of Ben Gurion, while his profile shows up in lights on the backdrop just to make sure you recognize who it is. Then we cut to the screening of the children's film in Ramya, with a string of colored lights and a generator overcoming the darkness. Maybe there you have the cultural alternative of Ramya.
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