West Hollywood Censors Palestine Documentary
The following article is republished from Palestine Legal:
The City of West Hollywood has blocked the screening of a documentary about Palestinian history, 1948: Creation and Catastrophe, in response to demands from pro-Israel groups.
West Hollywood caved to pressure from Israel advocates, including Rabbi Denise L. Eger of Congregation Kol Ami in West Hollywood, who wrote to city council members demanding the screening be cancelled, denouncing the film and defaming filmmaker Professor Ahlam Muhtaseb as antisemitic. Eger cut and pasted the false accusations against Muhtaseb from the McCarthyist blacklisting website Canary Mission.
The documentary was co-directed by Muhtaseb, a Palestinian-American professor of communication studies and Director of the Center for Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies at California State University, San Bernardino.
Muhtaseb’s documentary looks at the Nakba, the catastrophe that began with the forced expulsion of 750,000 Palestinians from their homes in 1948.
The City of West Hollywood initially planned to screen the film on November 16 as part of its Human Rights Speakers Series. After calls for its censorship, the screening was first delayed to December 12, and now has now been indefinitely “postponed.”
Muhtaseb spent ten years researching and producing the documentary. The film screened at eleven different film festivals around the world and was screened coast to coast in the United States, in England, Italy, Dubai, Australia, Kuwait, Egypt, Israel and Canada. Since its premiere at the Arizona International Film Festival in 2017, it was screened at Oxford, UCLA, UC Berkeley and McGill.
Attorney Liz Jackson from Palestine Legal commented, “West Hollywood has censored Palestinians and Israelis trying to tell their first-hand stories from 1948, based on false accusations from a blacklisting website. The echoes of McCarthyism in Hollywood are alarming.”
To contact the West Hollywood City Council call 323-848-6460 or email council@weho.org.
Ask whether they watched the film before cancelling the December 12 screening, and urge them to reverse their decision.