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A year on, why don’t films ask what Hamas aims to achieve?

September 6, 2024 13:45
We Will Dance Again premiere long shot - National Library of Israel - photo Hanna Taieb
3 min read

It’s a hard to believe it is approaching a year since the events of October 7, which were to rock all of our worlds with their repercussions continuing to reverberate.

Media organisations all over the globe have been planning how they are going to commemorate the Simchat Torah massacre and the ensuing war, the BBC among them. What will make it so different for our national broadcaster compared to the others will be the intense scrutiny it will come under. It is fair to say the Beeb has not had a great war.

From the start there have been horrendous mistakes, such as when wide-eyed veteran reporters eagerly agreed that Israel had bombed the Al-Ahli hospital, killing 500 people, when it hadn’t. Last month more than 200 Jewish people from the TV and film industry signed a letter to the BBC board calling for an urgent investigation into what it called “systemic problems of antisemitism and bias”, while several employees have been called out or even fired for posting explicitly antisemitic tweets.

On the other side of the equation, Muslim, Arab and Palestinian employees have accused the corporation of failing to humanise Palestinians.

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