LOS
ANGELES, January 17, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – Winning the much
coveted Golden Globe for best foreign language film, Palestinian
filmmaker Hany Abu-Assad has used his acceptance speech to call for an
independent state for his people and an end to the injustices done by
the Israeli occupation.
"[The
prize is] a recognition that the Palestinians deserve their liberty
and equality unconditionally," Assad told a host of Hollywood
stars, including Harrison Ford and Virginia Madsen, on Monday, January
16, reported Reuters.
The
Palestinian filmmaker said he did not take sides in his masterpiece
"Paradise Now," but had tried to explain why two simple
garage mechanics would be willing to kill themselves and others.
"I
don't believe my film is controversial. It just shows something from a
different side that we are all worried about," he told reporters
backstage at the Globes.
On
May 14 of every year, Palestinians commemorate Nakba Day which marks
the creation of Israel on the rubble of Palestine and the bodies of
the Palestinians.
Run
since 1944 by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA), the
Golden Globe awards are given to motion pictures and television
programs.
Winning
the Globe gives "Paradise Now" a major boost for a possible
Oscar nomination. No Palestinian film has ever been nominated to the
most prestigious prize in showbiz.
The
film made its World Premiere at the Berlin Film Festival 2005, where
it won the Blue Angel Award for Best European Film, the Berliner
Morgenpost Readers' Prize and the Amnesty International Award for Best
Film.
“Injustice”
Assad
said his film wants the viewer to understand the mind-set that
produces such acts as bombings, mainly because of injustice done to
Palestinians and peace impotence under Israeli occupation.
"The
feeling of the impotence is so strong that they kill themselves and
others to say, 'I am not impotent.' It is a very complex situation,
but the overriding umbrella is the injustice situation."
The
characters' words underlie that thought as they go through their daily
lives in occupied territory, which the film presents as an airless,
hermetically sealed prison.
"Under
the occupation, we're already dead ... In this life we are dead anyway
... If we can't live as equals, at least we can die as equals"
are typical refrains in the film.
"Paradise
Now" tells the story of two young Palestinians as they embark
upon what may be the last 48 hours of their lives.
The
film shows their typical daily lives, which grind on Israeli rocket
attacks and crushing poverty.
The
two childhood friends have been preparing to blow themselves up in
Israel for most of their lives but reconsider their actions at the end
of the movie.
Assad
wrote "Paradise Now" in 1999 and shot it in Nablus in 2004.
To
make the movie, he had to dodge a missile attack from Israel plus
skirt landmines and threats from some Palestinians.
Famed
Israeli psychologist Yisrael Oran had underlined a stark difference
between suicidal and "self-bombing" operations.
"The
psychological incentive for committing suicide shows up as an internal
unbearable pain and hopelessness the only way to stop is thought to be
killing oneself," he said.
"But
the "self-bomber" feels the only way to change the tough
conditions others are inflicted by is to take it hard and give up his
life as a last-ditch attempt to evade permanent threatening
danger."