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Theatre

It may be a one-sided play but what's worse is that it's no good

May 28, 2015 14:03
Fury: Newsman Jon Snow attended the post-play debate with our writer

ByJosh Glancy, Josh Glancy

4 min read

The Siege does not make comfortable viewing. It is an angry, loud and hectic play. Five men wield assault rifles, shout, bleed, embrace, argue and dream inside the imagined confines of the Church of the Nativity. They have taken refuge there (or taken hostages, depending on your view of the incident), amid fighting with Israeli forces during the second intifada.

The men retreat into a room, where they are given sanctuary by the priests who remain in the church, and then spend the next 39 days stuck there, until they sign an agreement to be let out and exiled. Some went to Gaza, others to Europe. They have not been able to return. The Siege is being put on by the Freedom Theatre, a dramatic organisation based in Jenin, which focuses on "cultural resistance" to the occupation of Palestine. It is inspired by interviews with some of the survivors from the incident.

The Siege is currently touring Britain, and I attended the press night at Battersea Arts Centre. The decision to stage the show has been controversial. Zionist groups, including the Zionist Federation and Sussex Friends of Israel, have protested against the play, handing out leaflets on its first night in Battersea and holding a vigil for the civilians who were killed by some of the Palestinian men who hid inside the church.

The ZF argued that the play amounted to a "white-washing of the second intifada", and questioned whether it should have received £14,000 of funding from the Arts Council of England.