The London Palestinian Film Festival opened this
year with Elia Suleiman’s latest feature “The Time
that Remains” (105min), a monumental reflective and
poetic take on Palestine since 1948.
To a certain extent Suleiman’s latest film reminded me
of Ramzy Baroud’s book My Father Was a Freedom
Fighter. Both works chart a personal and devastating
expedition into hopelessness. Both accounts are
saturated with repeated failures and betrayals, both
Baroud and Suleiman are courageous enough to criticise
their collective narrative and yet, both pepper their
story with some staggering wit, hope and humour. They
make you smile just when you are about to sob.
To watch trailer:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZmUPHXAC3Lk
Like Baroud, Suleiman juxtaposes the Palestinian
journey from heaven to hell with the Zionist
phantasmic counter move from ‘hell’ to ‘heaven’. The
devastating images of Palestinian torture and
dispossession are scattered with scenes of cheerful
Israeli arrogance, looting and sadism. This counter
flow of the two people is rather crucial to the
understanding of the conflict. As much as Palestinian
expulsion is concrete and deeply imbued in the
consciousness of every Palestinian, the Jewish
imaginary ‘home coming’ journey from ‘hostile Diaspora
hell’ to the ‘Zionist Eden’ has proved to be dubious
and unforgiving for the Jews.
It is obvious that the Israelis have never managed to
make the holy land into their ‘homeland’. They are
alienated from its nature, they poisoned the soil and
polluted their rivers, they ruined the landscape
shredding it with gigantic concrete walls and
monstrous urban settlements but worse than that they
eradicated the indigenous civilization of Palestine or
at least this is what they tried to do. In fact this
unique form of Israeli detachment is where Suleiman
launches his film.
With Suleiman himself seated silently in the back of a
brand new limo we watch an Israeli chauffeur prepare
himself for a journey. Using his radio communication
system the driver reports to his station “do not try
to contact me, I am about to start a long ride…”
Within a few seconds into the journey a storm breaks
out, lightning, thunder and rain is pouring. Our
Israeli chauffeur is totally disorientated, he can not
see, he doesn’t know where he is, the fuel is running
out. It is not long before he stops his car just to
find out that the radio is dead. “What am I doing
here? Where am I? How did I get here in the first
place?” He cries out. The Israeli driver is stranded
in the middle of the night out of nowhere. He is
isolated with no radio or fuel in an unknown land that
was supposed to be his promised one. He is lonely but
not alone. He has a silent Palestinian passenger
sitting comfortably in the back seat staring at him.
The allegory is pretty obvious. As much as the
Zionists wanted to believe that their ‘home coming’
project was a journey from the ‘Diaspora hell’ into a
‘promised shelter’, they are now becoming prisoners of
their lethal unethical aspiration. Soaked with power,
loaded with American weaponry they are driving a brand
new Hummer in the dark, crossing an alien and hostile
land, they do not know where they are going, their
fuel is about to run out at any minute, they do not
know why they do it. However, one thing is certain,
they have a silent Palestinian passenger sitting
comfortably in their back seat. The latter like the
rest of us is watching them in their downfall.
Suleiman offers a critical reading of the Palestinian
society. He touches some of the most painful subjects,
he looks at the collaborators, he confronts the
cowardice, he touches the manic depressive drive
within Arabic culture and yet, in spite of all that,
he has hope in him. Miraculously enough, Palestine
seems to prevail.
To watch a scene from Suleiman's Divine Intervention
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5izvci8XUk
In Suleiman’s cinematic chronicle we follow a
reportage of an organised criminal army fighting
scattered civilian resistance, we see IDF soldiers
looting, terrorising and torturing the civilian
population, we see the proud indigenous becoming a
defeated minority on their own land, we watch
Palestinian children singing Zionist songs at school
to a cheerful Israeli minister. We then witness IDF
soldiers shooting these kids as they become resilient
stone throwing teenagers. As the story evolves
Suleiman takes us to contemporary Ramallah where we
see Palestinians living somehow proudly celebrating
their Arab culture.
While in Ramallah we witness a thought provoking scene
that throws new light over the balance of power
between the Israeli and the Palestinian. As an Israeli
Merkava tank invades the whole of the screen, we
notice a Palestinian youngster leaving his front door
on his way to empty some rubbish. The Israeli tank
stops. Its barrel chases the youngster’ head as he
walk towards the dustbin. This is no doubt a
devastating image. However, on his way back to his
front door the Palestinian lad receives a mobile call
from a friend. The youngster stays in the street
joyfully chatting to his friend. All that time the
Merkava’s barrel follows his move in something that
rapidly transforms into a comical parody on Israeli
power. All along, the young Palestinian doesn’t take
any notice of the large calibre barrel that chases his
head. It seems as if the Israeli power of deterrence
is a matter for historians.
Suleiman’s message is clear. In order to maintain the
Jewish national project, Israel may have to attach a
tank to every Palestinian. But it goes further. While
the Palestinian young man is up and about walking
freely enjoying the Mediterranean sun, four Israeli
soldiers, probably about the same age, are locked
inside a Merkava tank. The Israelis are stranded by a
merciless and yet futile ideology that leads nowhere.
They are enslaved to a Palestinian lad who doesn’t
even bother to look at them. The Israeli soldiers
cannot see the daylight. They see life through their
military periscope. The Merkava tank can be
interpreted as a metaphor of the Israeli ghetto
mentality. However, as far as Israel is concerned, the
Merkava tank is not just a metaphor, it is not mere
symbolism, it is actually the true reality of the
Jewish state and the Jewish political being. The
Israelis are locking themselves behind separation
walls and within tanks and bunkers.
While in his previous film a victory was a matter for
Divine Intervention, in the current film the fog
clears away. The Palestinians seem to win just because
the Israelis are doomed to lose. The Israelis are
victims of their own relentless brutality. The more
sinister they are, the more tormented they become by
the fear they inflict on themselves. The Israeli
paranoia is a matter of projection. They think to
themselves, ‘if others are as brutal as we happen to
be, we must be in real trouble.’
Symbolically, Suleiman is from Nazareth something that
may remind some of us that someone else from the same
town presented a very similar criticism of Jewish
tribalism just two thousand years ago. Israel is
indeed locked in exactly the same vicious circle as
its imaginary forefathers. The more brutal it becomes,
the more terrorised it gets by its own viciousness.
Jesus saw it all. Love your neighbour was his
solution. Turn your other cheek he maintained. The
Israeli failure to grasp that compassion is the way
forward is the true meaning of the Jewish tragedy. We
are dealing here with an unfolding chronicle of an
imminent disaster. On the other hand, in Suleiman's
depiction of Palestinian recent history, it is the
Palestinians’ forgiveness that shines.
Suleiman, may as well be the ultimate master of
cinematic poetic symbolism. He manages to deliver the
most devastating message through music and silence. He
manages to convey the deepest philosophical idea
through a little piece of choreography. As much as
film is largely a visual art form, in Suleiman’s work,
the ear has its primacy. Music, sounds and rhythms
communicate where the eye fails. The sound is the bond
with the past. It is the ear that transcends us to the
realm of the universal. Through the ear rather than
the eye we reconnect with our past, present and
future.