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Film

A documentary helped me reconcile with my family

His family rejected him because he was gay. But when a film was made about Saar Maoz, it helped him confront the past.

April 6, 2017 15:03
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By

Stephen Applebaum,

Stephen Applebaum

3 min read

Saar Maoz sounds like a man who’s had a weight lifted from his shoulders. The subject of Tomer and Barak Heymann’s documentary, Who’s Gonna Love Me Now?, Maoz lives with HIV, but no longer worries about what his family and the Orthodox community he grew up in think about his sexuality and condition.

It was different when Maoz, 44, was 14, and realised he wasn’t attracted to girls. The eldest of seven siblings living on a religious kibbutz, Sde Eliyahu, in northern Israel, he was terrified of coming out.

“My big fear was my family would kick me out, or the kibbutz would kick me out, and I wouldn’t be able to stay around my friends, my family. It was a very scary thought. So how I dealt with it was to hide it.” He kept his secret for five years, “and gradually got more depressed. To everybody I was a very friendly teenager. But I spent a lot of time in my room, crying.”

Religion offered no comfort. “There is an age where it’s all like Seder nights and candles and nice songs, and then at some point it starts to limit you. That’s how I experienced it.” The kibbutz (“Imagine a small country with a fence around it”) demanded conformity.