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Palestine Is Still the Issue

  • TV Movie
  • 2002
  • 53m
IMDb RATING
8.2/10
493
YOUR RATING
Palestine Is Still the Issue (2002)
Documentary

A documentary about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that has lasted for more than 50 years. Contains some interviews with the children in this conflict.A documentary about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that has lasted for more than 50 years. Contains some interviews with the children in this conflict.A documentary about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that has lasted for more than 50 years. Contains some interviews with the children in this conflict.

  • Director
    • Tony Stark
  • Writer
    • John Pilger
  • Stars
    • John Pilger
    • Fatima Abed-Rabo
    • Amjad Abu Laban
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.2/10
    493
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tony Stark
    • Writer
      • John Pilger
    • Stars
      • John Pilger
      • Fatima Abed-Rabo
      • Amjad Abu Laban
    • 8User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos

    Top cast14

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    John Pilger
    John Pilger
    • Self - Reporter
    Fatima Abed-Rabo
    • Self
    Amjad Abu Laban
    • Self - Palestinian resident, Bethlehem
    Mustafa Barghouti
    • Self - Union of Palestinian Medical Relief Committees
    • (as Mustafa Barghouthi)
    Khaled Dahlan
    • Self - Gaza Community Health Project
    Moshe Dam
    • Self - Israeli writer
    Rami Elhanan
    • Self
    Mona Al Fasra
    • Self - Palestinian Doctor
    Dori Gold
    • Self
    Lama Hourami
    • Self - Palestinian resident, Gaza
    Khalid Idis
    • Self
    Ilan Pappe
    • Self - Israeli historian
    David Reisch
    • Self - Israeli settler
    Ihay Rosen-Zvi
    • Self - Former Israeli soldier
    • Director
      • Tony Stark
    • Writer
      • John Pilger
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews8

    8.2493
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    Featured reviews

    8Platypuschow

    Palestine Is Still the Issue: Essential viewing

    Though Palestine Is Still the Issue doesn't bring any new facts to the table it's an awareness documentary that I believe everyone should watch.

    Perhaps if more people knew of the travesty's taking place and had the mainstream medias lies about Israel explained to them then something could be done about it.

    This is the third John Pilger film I've watched and I very much enjoy his work. If I were to criticize in anyway I'd point out that his documentaries are a tad on the short side.

    If you are not aware of what is going on in Palestine and what has been for a very very long time then I suggest you give these 52 minutes your time. Another drawn out genocide, another cover up, another group of people demonised by the media while the truly evil ones are defended by our governments.

    And yet again all the death, all the intolerance, all the acts of purely evil taking place are directly attributed to religion.

    To quote Bill Maher "For mankind to survive, religion must die"
    fbossert

    Palestina is, indeed, still the issue.

    This is a good documentary film about life in the occupied territories of Gaza and Transjordania; it also includes a short outline of the basic historic facts of the conflict, as well as some –otherwise obvious and self-imposed- ideas on the origin of inter-ethnic violence between Palestina and Israel. As many other documentaries around on the subject, this film does a lot by simply exposing some facts that are evident in Middle East, but rarely reach Western medias. After watching some of these films (made both by independent Israeli film-makers as Mograbi or European as Pilger) you realize that what they show is not at all some "unique footage" got by means of deep research, chance or perseverance, nor the product of a good deal of careful edition: once the crew can make it into the occupied territories (which apparently isn't that easy) they only need to shoot for a while the army checkpoints, the Israeli weapons everywhere, the 8 meters wall built in 2002, the "Jews-only" highways, the devastated lands or the towns destroyed by Israeli bombs to show what the Israeli occupation means. Anyway, the most shocking thing in this film -at least for me- are perhaps not these images, but the interviews to Israeli authorities and common-citizens; it is only then that you get to understand how this situation could happen and persists. Now, one of the reviews here shows exactly that point of view (look around for it). This reviewer tries to contest the whole film by pointing-out two alleged "mistakes" made by Pilger (which would show his total dishonesty about the subject): 1) Israel doesn't have the 4th most powerful army in the world, as Pilger claims; and 2) "Pilger makes the mistake of saying that Israel controlled 78% of the land after the 1948 War of Independence". As for number 1), maybe Israel was actually ranked number 4 for year 2002 (but where? by whom? on which standards?) maybe not: it doesn't matter at all. The only point here is that Israel has an army -and a very strong one, including nuclear weapons- and Palestine doesn't have any army at all, nor big or small – in the touching words of the Israeli that close the film: compared to us, Palestine is a mosquito. As for number 2), I'm afraid Pilger is right: even though Israel was given 55% of Palestine by the ONU in 1947, in the facts they were never restricted to that territory. The war began the next day and after it Israel was occupying 78% of Palestine -throwing out 750.000 Palestinians in the meanwhile, who would become refugees and would grow up to be more than 5.000.000 today. Other than this, the review doesn 't say a thing about what we see in the film. Some of its expressions, though, are in perfect harmony with the shocking opinions that I commented before. For instance, it accuses Pilger of using "Nazi-style tactics". In fact, critics to Israeli politics -even when made by reputed Jew intellectuals as Hannah Arendt- are commonly labeled as "antisemitism" or even –as here- Nazism. Far from it, in this case: the most important voices of the film are precisely those of Israeli Jew citizens who give a different insight on the situation and on the deep causes of violence, and even confess to be ashamed of their government politics against the Palestinians. A second example: this film "goes to discredit the only free democracy in the Middle East", says the reviewer. Leaving aside the military occupied territories of Gaza and Transjordania –which wouldn't be called "a democracy" by the drunkest madman on earth- and focusing on Israel itself, it would be a little funny to call that a sparkling democracy, if we remember that non-Jew Israeli citizens just don't have many of the rights granted to Jew citizens: different access –if any access at all- to land, to jobs and -more dramatically- to Law. Depending on your religious beliefs or political ideology, you may or not agree with this discrimination, you may justify it or not; but what you can not do is to call it a "free democracy", not under any available definition of the term.
    10view_and_review

    Finding and Reminding

    John Pilger is doing what he does best: alerting the viewer of oppression and tyranny that he/she otherwise would not have been aware of. He's extraordinarily adept at finding and reminding. That is finding the acts of state sanctioned tyranny and reminding the world that it is still going on. It doesn't matter if it's in Australia ("The Secret Country: The First Australians Fight Back"), East Timor ("Death of a Nation: The Timor Conspiracy"), Latin America ("The War on Democracy"), or Palestine ("Palestine is Still the Issue"). He boldly and humbly goes to different parts of the world to allow the downtrodden and marginalized to speak.

    In "Palestine is Still the Issue" he shows how apartheid, occupation, and state sanctioned terrorism continues to occur in occupied Palestine under the guise of "defense" while the western world turns a blind eye. As long as Israel has the backing and the blessing of the U. S. they can and will continue to usurp Palestinian land and spill Palestinian blood. The silence from the western nations is deafening.
    lbohne

    An accurate, honest, and impassioned video-essay on Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

    British writer DH Lawrence once classified the passion for justice as the finest and noblest of all emotions. John Pilger's accurate and fair account of the conflict between Palestine and Israel is one of the finest examples of this passion. Pilger is now teaching at Cornell University and is the recipient of countless journalistic awards. A renowned veteran war reporter, he has covered some of the most war-torn regions of the world: Vietnam, Cambodia, East Timor, Afghanistan and many others. Only the most sullen opponents to his commitment to freedom and justice would deny him the status he enjoys as a first-class journalist.

    "Palestine Is Still the Issue" is a must-see for Americans, who are kept in the dark by the media and political elites by the real nature of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It is a conflict about land, which the documentary makes clear. The brutality of the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) in dealing with the people it occupies--the Palestinians--is, indeed, uncomfortable to watch for people who wish to shrink from the truth, but the film is replete

    with interviews with conscientious Israelis who oppose the Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands--including a traumatic interview with an Israeli father of a victim of a suicide bomber.
    10ceymooney

    excellent flick; the most important side of the story

    i know that many do not like that this movie is one-sided, but where you stand determines what you see. in discussing the israeli occupation of palestine and all the other elements of this conflict, actually tackling the occupation itself is the most important element of the conflict to include.

    pilgier does it a gain by going straight to the heart of the matter and raising all the tough questions; in israel, these types of discussions are commonplace, but in the u.s., unfortunately, the most important parts of the story are taboo. discussion of the situation from which the violence grows are taboo. you can't discuss the israel/palestine conflict without tackling the reason for the season...the israeli occupation. as every story has a few dozen (at least) sides to it, if you're gonna pick one side to cover, pick the one that addresses the root causes of the subject matter. pilgier has done it again.

    equal time would be something like this--ordinary palestnian life under military occupation--12 hrs/day, 7 days/week. but this is a good start.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Inspired by Amira Hass's book "Drinking the Sea at Gaza".

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 16, 2002 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Palestina todavía es la cuestión
    • Filming locations
      • Israel
    • Production company
      • Carlton Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      53 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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