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Gilad Atzmon - Sabra, Shatila and Collective Amnesia
Waltz With Bashir is a breath-taking new Israeli film, an animated documentary directed by Ari Folman.
In 1982, Folman was a 19-year-old IDF infantry soldier. Twenty four years later, in 2006, Folman is surprised to find out that he does not remember a thing from that war or the massacres in Sabra and Shatila. The film is a journey into Folman's lost past.
The documentary is set as a chain of animated interviews and conversations between Folman and his military associates, psychologists and Ron Ben Yishai, the legendary Israeli TV reporter who was among the first to report on the Sabra and Shatila Massacres. The setting aims at building a coherent personal past narrative out of the broken memories of others.
The film is highly sensitive and emotionally moving. To a certain extent, it is a very brave individual attempt to deal with the devastating collective Israeli past, and the massacres in Sabra and Shatila in particular. However, we are asked to remember that the massacres in the Palestinian refugee camps, though set up by the Israeli Army, were physically carried out by the Lebanese Christian Phalangists.
This may explain why the Israelis are so enthusiastic about the film. On the one hand, it wasn't them who made the actual kill. On the other hand, loving the film portrays them as first-rate humanists. They allegedly deal with their dark past.
At the time the news about the massacre broke out in the Israeli media, PM Menachem Begin cynically answered his critics, "Arabs kill Arabs, and Jews blame each other". PM Begin somehow managed to prophetically hit the nail on the head. It appears as if the Israelis can easily deal with a critical film about the Sabra and Shatila massacres, precisely because it was 'Arabs killing Arabs'. Noticeably, Mohamed Bakri's Jenin, Jenin, a film that tells the story of the Jenin massacre, a murderous assault committed by IDF soldiers, was not at all approved by the Israeli people. Clearly, the Israelis do not want to learn about their murderous acts from a fellow citizen who happens to be an Arab.
In Waltz With Bashir, Folman is searching for his lost past. His first step is his psychologist friend who manages to come with a very helpful insight. "The memory," so says the Psychologist, "can be very creative. When it is necessary, it just invents a past."
This may help us to understand Folman's and his companions ' reflections. As one would expect, in the film the IDF soldier is somehow a victim. He is part of a big war machine, he "follows orders". The individual soldier is powerless, he cannot stop the massacre, he can only report to his superiors. Alternatively he can "shoot and cry" in retrospect, or, as in Folman's case, he can deal with amnesia or repression.
Cleverly and beautifully done, the entire film is animated, which allows us to assume that every retrieved memory or spoken past narrative may be a constructed one. However, the last scene of the film is real footage. It takes us to the devastated refugee camps and the Palestinian sobbing. It is there to tell us: 'Ladies and Gentlemen, the following is not a personal memory. This footage is not animated deconstruction. This is a REAL massacre that took place under our noses.'
Waltz With Bashir is a breath-taking new Israeli film, an animated documentary directed by Ari Folman.
In 1982, Folman was a 19-year-old IDF infantry soldier. Twenty four years later, in 2006, Folman is surprised to find out that he does not remember a thing from that war or the massacres in Sabra and Shatila. The film is a journey into Folman's lost past.
The documentary is set as a chain of animated interviews and conversations between Folman and his military associates, psychologists and Ron Ben Yishai, the legendary Israeli TV reporter who was among the first to report on the Sabra and Shatila Massacres. The setting aims at building a coherent personal past narrative out of the broken memories of others.
The film is highly sensitive and emotionally moving. To a certain extent, it is a very brave individual attempt to deal with the devastating collective Israeli past, and the massacres in Sabra and Shatila in particular. However, we are asked to remember that the massacres in the Palestinian refugee camps, though set up by the Israeli Army, were physically carried out by the Lebanese Christian Phalangists.
This may explain why the Israelis are so enthusiastic about the film. On the one hand, it wasn't them who made the actual kill. On the other hand, loving the film portrays them as first-rate humanists. They allegedly deal with their dark past.
At the time the news about the massacre broke out in the Israeli media, PM Menachem Begin cynically answered his critics, "Arabs kill Arabs, and Jews blame each other". PM Begin somehow managed to prophetically hit the nail on the head. It appears as if the Israelis can easily deal with a critical film about the Sabra and Shatila massacres, precisely because it was 'Arabs killing Arabs'. Noticeably, Mohamed Bakri's Jenin, Jenin, a film that tells the story of the Jenin massacre, a murderous assault committed by IDF soldiers, was not at all approved by the Israeli people. Clearly, the Israelis do not want to learn about their murderous acts from a fellow citizen who happens to be an Arab.
In Waltz With Bashir, Folman is searching for his lost past. His first step is his psychologist friend who manages to come with a very helpful insight. "The memory," so says the Psychologist, "can be very creative. When it is necessary, it just invents a past."
This may help us to understand Folman's and his companions ' reflections. As one would expect, in the film the IDF soldier is somehow a victim. He is part of a big war machine, he "follows orders". The individual soldier is powerless, he cannot stop the massacre, he can only report to his superiors. Alternatively he can "shoot and cry" in retrospect, or, as in Folman's case, he can deal with amnesia or repression.
Cleverly and beautifully done, the entire film is animated, which allows us to assume that every retrieved memory or spoken past narrative may be a constructed one. However, the last scene of the film is real footage. It takes us to the devastated refugee camps and the Palestinian sobbing. It is there to tell us: 'Ladies and Gentlemen, the following is not a personal memory. This footage is not animated deconstruction. This is a REAL massacre that took place under our noses.'
Sabra, Shatila et l'amnésie collective La question laissée au pacifiste enthousiaste est : « Quelle chance est laissée à la paix avec une telle identité autodestructrice ? Ou alors, comment pouvez-vous faire la paix avec un sujet qui est obsédé par sa destruction future ? ».
Gilad Atzmon
Palestine Think Tank
Valse avec Bashir est un nouveau film israélien stupéfiant, un documentaire animé réalisé par Ari Folman.





