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Mike Leigh's wrong about Israel boycott

Director Julian Schnabel explains why he had no problem going to Israel to make a film about the Middle East conflict

November 25, 2010 12:30
Julian Schnabel , director of Miral. “I think it draws a pretty good mirror up to both sides”

By

Stephen Applebaum,

Stephen Applebaum

3 min read

The acclaimed New York artist Julian Schnabel never intended to make movies. But when concerns over the way a biopic about his late painter friend, Jean-Michel Basquiat, was going compelled him to take over and direct it himself, he became an accidental filmmaker. "I did it as a rescue mission," he says, "and had no intention of making another film. But it was just something that came very naturally to me."

He went on to win praise for Before Night Falls, starring Javier Bardem as the gay Cuban poet, Reynaldos Arenas, and, especially, for 2007's awards-laden The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, about Elle editor Jean-Dominique Bauby, who suffered total body paralysis after a stroke. Schnabel made that film for his cancer-stricken father, Jack, "because he was stuck inside his body, dying". His latest film, Miral, now connects him to the humanitarian spirit of his Zionist mother, Esta, who died in 2002, and to his Jewish roots.

Adapted from Palestinian Israeli author Rula Jebreal's semi-autobiographical novel of the same name, Miral explores the Middle East conflict through the experiences of several generations of Palestinian women, and the influence of Hind Husseini, who used her wealth to transform her Jerusalem home into an orphange/school for Palestinian girls, after stumbling across 55 abandoned and destitute children in the city's streets in 1948. As the Israeli-Palestinian conflict rumbled on, she taught her charges the importance of education over violence.

"She was a modern Arab woman, a Muslim," says Jebreal, who grew up under Husseini's tutelage and became a prominent political journalist in Italy. "She understood from the beginning that there's no way for sustainable diplomacy or peace without regular people having access to education. And she also understood that the women are the weak part of the conflict. So she tried to save as many as she could."