In a hard-hitting interview on October 19 for Le Mur a des Oreilles, a program on Belgian station RadioPanik, Palestinian actor Saleh Bakri delivered his clearest statement yet of his political commitment and rejection of the Israeli state鈥檚 use of cinema as a propaganda tool.
In the interview, the star of films such as When I Saw You and describes his childhood desire to be a painter, his initial reluctance to act, and his family鈥檚 major position in Palestinian theatre and film.
Saleh Bakri鈥檚 father, Mohammed Bakri, is an award-winning actor and high-profile director, and his two brothers are both up-and-coming actors. Saleh himself has also appeared in international productions such as Moroccan production La Source Des Femmes and a new Italian crime drama, Salvo.
In the past, Saleh Bakri has appeared in Israeli films most notably The Band鈥檚 Visit and was once voted 鈥渟exiest man in Israel鈥.
But, he says, he opposes the way his appearance in Israeli films has been manipulated to 鈥渕ake Israel look good鈥 and appear as a diverse and democratic state.
The defining moment seems to have come with the legal action taken against his father, Mohammed Bakri, for making the documentary Jenin, Jenin, which exposed Israeli war crimes during 2002鈥檚 鈥淥peration Defensive Shield鈥. The film was first censored, and although legal action allowed it to be screened in Israel, Mohammed was then sued for 2.5 million shekels (about $745,000) for libel by soldiers named in it.
In lifting the censor鈥檚 ban on the film, the Israeli High Court called the film a 鈥減ropagandistic lie鈥 for allegedly showing only one side of the events of the 2002 massacre. Mohammed responded by pointing out that almost all Israeli films have ignored Palestinian points of view without being called one-sided.
According to Saleh, his father faced a decade of death threats, public censure, legal cases and hate mail over his stance, but 鈥渘ot one of his supposed Israeli friends came to support him in court 鈥 except the late Juliano Mer Lhamis聽 [of the Freedom Theatre in Jenin refugee camp] and Udi Aloni. It made me think a lot about why I participate any longer in Israeli films or Israeli theater if I can鈥檛 count on my colleagues to stand with me.鈥
Ultimately, says Saleh, he does not identify as an Israeli but purely as a Palestinian and Arab: 鈥淚 was born a Palestinian and will remain a Palestinian. I don鈥檛 believe that I could even be called an Israeli or that any Palestinian could be called Israeli 鈥 I care about Palestine as a place for everybody, as a place that was never Islamic, Christian or Jewish.鈥
In rejecting what he terms the 鈥渇ascism鈥 he sees growing in Israel, Haifa-based Bakri acknowledges the personal and professional danger of taking a strong position within Israel, but also insists that he wants 鈥渢o change things 鈥 in a way I am happy to have come to such a decision. It gives me more energy.鈥
[Reprinted from Electronic Intifada. Saleh Bakri鈥檚 full interview with writer and activist Frank Barat can be heard online at the , where a is also available.]