Thursday, July 14, 2005

 

A-HA!!

I got to speak a few words with one of the festival's guests - Mr. Cai Mingliang, a Taiwanese director. I'm proud of myself for working up the courage to walk to him and chat in Mandarin. I haven't seen his latest yet, it's called Wayward Cloud, but I definitely will.

Wednesday, July 13, 2005

 
That's what the parade looked like. Reminds of something Fellini might do.
(I wrote that the pictures were bad, that's the only one close to decent).

 

A season in hell

The last two weeks have been crazy as hell…
Almost made me forget I came back from China exactly one year ago.
It started on Thursday, June 30th, with the Jerusalem gay pride parade. I went there to take some pictures, which didn't turn out so well, which isn't really important because the party atmosphere, which was tense from the first place, was interrupted by a fanatic homophobe who stabbed 3 of the participants. I happened to walk by one of them, I saw him bleeding and holding his arm, and I thought to myself – what kind of joke is that? Only when a girl next to him shouted that he's stabbed I realized what I'm seeing and shouted for a police woman walking by. Later I was in a state of shock.

This was a very "small" incident in my terror stricken town, no one died, nothing exploded, and yet it changed something for me. The stabber, an Ultra Orthodox Jew, about thirty, is only the tip of the iceberg in what became a very heated debate over the parade in Jerusalem. For some reason, on the fourth time this parade has taken place it attracted more hostility than ever. It seemed like the only thing that can bring Jews, Muslims and Christians together is their common hate for the gay community. But it's not just about gays – 2 of the 3 who got stabbed are "straits" who joined their friends, just like me. This is a new border line that's drawn between two of the Jewish communities in Israel – those who are afraid of any kind of change, and those who are willing to accept the rights of those who are different than themselves. This line is felt strongly through the pro and against campaigns to the Gaza pullout. Those against it have an orange ribbon tied to their cars or bags, and those for it – a blue one.

To further my surrealist summer, the London terror attack happened on the same day that the most important holiday in my "religion" started – The Jerusalem Film Festival. Appropriately, the opening movie was a special outdoor screening of ""War of the Worlds". Since this year I work for the festival, I only got to see half of it, and I don't think I want to see the rest. As staff I can go to any movie I want, and so far I've seen several, like Kim Ki Duk's 3-Iron (Bin Jip).

Wish me a quiet summer.

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