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Religion, Politics Collide In Jerusalem Film

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  • Religion, Politics Collide In Jerusalem Film

    RELIGION, POLITICS COLLIDE IN JERUSALEM FILM
    By Rebecca Harrison

    Reuters
    April 14 2008

    JERUSALEM (Reuters Life!) - Featuring turf wars between priests and
    ritual sheep slaughter, a new Israeli film shows how religion and
    politics collide to make Jerusalem's Old City one of the most intense
    and colorful places on earth.

    Studded with church spires, synagogues and slender minarets, the
    single square kilometer (247 acres) inside Jerusalem's ancient
    ramparts is sacred to three major faiths and cuts to the heart of
    the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

    "Holy Fire", by Israeli director Yoram Sabo, splices images from
    festivals and interviews with religious figures to pay homage to
    Jerusalem's unique character and explore the foibles and fervor of
    its inhabitants.

    "Jerusalem is a crazy place but that's part of its beauty," Sabo,
    a secular Jew, told Reuters. "It is run by religious people who can
    seem like freaks, but I want to show that they believe in what they
    are doing and that as a secular person you need to judge them by
    different criteria."

    Jerusalem is home to the Western Wall remnant of the ancient Jewish
    temple compound, Islam's revered al-Aqsa mosque and the Church of the
    Holy Sepulchre, which marks the traditional site of the crucifixion
    and resurrection of Jesus.

    Hundreds of pilgrims tramp daily through a warren of alleys in its four
    quarters -- Muslim, Jewish, Christian and Armenian -- alongside bearded
    rabbis in long black coats or monks swathed in cloaks and tunics.

    One of the film's characters is an Orthodox Jew who aspires to
    rebuild the ancient Jewish temple on Temple Mount, known to Muslims
    as al-Haram al-Sharif (Noble Sanctuary). Sacred to both religions,
    it is one of the most contentious spots on earth.

    Jews are banned from praying at the site, which has been a frequent
    flashpoint for violence between Israelis and Palestinians, but Yehuda
    Glick is shown on camera muttering a few words to his God when the
    Muslim guard's back is turned.

    "GOD'S WILL"

    "Holy Fire", which premiered at this month's Tel Aviv documentary
    festival, features footage from hundreds of CCTV cameras dotted around
    the Old City.

    Palestinian children in the Muslim quarter practice throwing stones.

    A senior Muslim cleric comments it is the only way for them to vent
    their frustration at the Israeli occupation.

    Sabo highlights some of the similarities between the religions -- both
    Jews and Muslims are shown preparing to slaughter sheep for religious
    festivals -- and strives to illustrate the motivation for their fervor.

    But ultimately believers on both sides argue it is "God's will"
    they alone control the most holy sites.

    Conflict is also fierce in the Christian sections of the city, where
    Greek and Armenian patriarchs tussle over who should take the lead
    in key religious ceremonies.

    A Franciscan monk tells how control over the grounds of the Church
    of the Holy Sepulchre is painstakingly carved among six sects, to the
    point where even a single step was split between two groups after it
    prompted a skirmish early last century.

    "There are a lot of passions here," the monk says.

    Sabo, who spent three years shooting the film, said he became
    fascinated with the Old City as a child and first visited after
    Israeli troops captured the city in the 1967 Middle East war.

    "I used to come here as young student and I felt strong and proud,"
    he said. "Now 40 years later, I wanted to come and see again what
    makes it so beautiful and strange, but not as an arrogant kid. This
    time I just wanted to listen to people."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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