"Jews
of Egypt" is an Egyptian documentary film produced by Haitham
Al-Khamissi and directed by Amir Ramses. The film is also co-written and
researched by Mostafa Youssef. It documents the history of the Jewish people
in Egypt.
The film covers the Jewish involvement in Egyptian business and arts in the first half of the 20th Century. It then mentions the founding of Israel in 1948, the Egyptian Revolution of 1952, and the Suez Crisis in 1956. Due to the crisis, the Jews of Egypt were forced into exile. People giving testimonials in the film include exiled Egyptian Jews, most of whom lived in Paris; Mohamed Abu El-Ghar, the author of Jews of Egypt: From Prosperity to Diaspora; a member of the Muslim Brotherhood who had participated in an attack of Jewish shops in Egypt in 1947; and Essam Fawzi, a sociologist.
Director
Amir Ramses said that he had considered making the film for several years.
Ramses and producer Haitham Al-Khamissi self-funded the film, believing that
relying on a sponsor, whether the sponsor was Arab or not, would hamper the
neutrality of the film. Ramses
took a six month trip to prepare for making the film. Ramses began conducting
research in late 2008. Research consisted of locating and interviewing Jews
within Egypt, building a "historical skeleton," and then obtaining
print media, videos, and other archival material. The film shooting began in 2009.
The 2011 Egyptian revolution caused work on the film to be suspended. Work was then resumed and the film was completed in September 2018.
The
avant-première occurred in October 2012 during the Panorama of the European
Film. Amir Ramses said that the premiere took place in a "blatantly
intellectual context." It was screened at the northern hemisphere
winter 2012 Arab Camera Festival in Rotterdam and the January 2013 Palm Springs
International Film Festival.
The film was scheduled for screening in theatres
in Cairo on the first week of March 2013 . On Wednesday March 13, 2013, producer Haitham El-Khameesy said
that the Censorship Bureau officials did not issue a permit for a release of
his film in Egyptian cinemas and that they requested to view the film before
they could allow its screening. Reuters said that security source told them
that the permit had been granted and that it had not prevented its
screening.The film's Egyptian cinema screening was ultimately scheduled for
27 March 2013.
After
the Egyptian government canceled the screening of the film, Khaled Diab, an
Egyptian-Belgian blogger, journalist, and writer, produced an opinion piece in
Haaretz in which he argued that "This damages the push-back against strong
anti-Jewish sentiment gripping the country, while failing to remind Egyptians
of a past era of diversity and tolerance." Ada Aharoni, the editor of
"The Golden Age of the Jews From Egypt," said "This film claimed
Jews had it good in Egypt and left only to America and France, not Israel — and
still it was banned."
Questions for discussion:
Do you ever watch documentaries? Why?
Are you with the idea of censorship? Why?
Questions for discussion:
Do you ever watch documentaries? Why?
Are you with the idea of censorship? Why?
References
Al-Ahram Weekly. Monday 25 February 2013. Retrieved on 29 September 2018.
Beach, Alastair. "Exodus: Fall of the Jews in Egypt." The Independent. 4 April 3013. Retrieved on 2 October 2018.
Elkamel, Sara. "'Jews of Egypt' tells story of Egypt's exiled Jewish community." (Archived 2013-04-09 at WebCite)
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