Nakba: Palestine, 1948 (2008)

Origin: Unknown | Documentary | Director: Ryuichi Hirokawa | 131 minutes

Nakba: Palestine, 1948

Ruyuichi Hirokawa 2008 docu 131 min.

Director Ryuichi Hirokawa is a leading photojournalist, with a body of
award winning work from Palestine, Iraq, Lebanon and Afghanistan. But his
journey into photography, into conflict areas, and into political activism,
is one intimately related to his encounters with Palestinian history.
Hirokawa travelled to Israel in 1967 to work on a kibbutz. One day he found
rubble at the edge of the kibbutz that later proved to be the remains of a
Palestinian village. His journey to find out what had happened to the
village started then so too, his involvement with socialist activism, as
well as his career as an investigative journalist and photographer. In the
years and decades that followed, Hirokawa continued to follow the
Palestinian exile into its darkest hour (covering the massacres at Sabra
and Shatilla in 1982), and to the present day, continuing to amass
evidence, testimonies, images, and artefacts from the Nakba and covering
the consequences of enduring dispossession. This incredible film,
masterfully assembled from hundreds of hours of documentation traces this
personal, political, national, and visual history, bringing the past and
the present together in an original and compelling way. The screening of
NAKBA: Palestine, 1948 in the 2009 London Palestine Film Festival is the UK
Premier and will be followed by a panel discussion and Q&A with director
Ryuichi Hirokawa and the preeminent scholars of Palestinian history, Ilan
Pappe and Karma Nabulsi. Hirokawa's visit is also celebrated with an
exhibition drawn from his work over the last three decades (from Lebanon
1982 to Gaza 2009) which he has selected specially for the Palestine Film
Festival.

Review: https://electronicintifada.net/content/film-review-palestine-1948-nakba/3538