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Melanie Phillips

ByMelanie Phillips, Melanie Phillips

Opinion

Fill the Void is a universal story of love and power

December 24, 2013 11:07
2 min read

There are many in the wider Jewish world who view the strictly Orthodox on a scale ranging from disdain and condescension to outright loathing.

When shown on film or in TV documentaries, the “black hats” tend to be the butt of criticism, dislike or ridicule. Their existence is depicted as harsh and narrow, bound by obscurantist rules which are utterly mystifying to those living in the “real” world who see nothing there in common with their own lives.

So Fill the Void, the first feature film by Israeli director Rama Burshtein, is a revelation. Told from the perspective of the director’s own world of Charedim, it illuminates it from within with a rare beauty as it unveils the extreme intensity and complexity of that culture.

It is a culture in which the overriding imperative is to put the welfare of others first; and in which the stupendous bulwark of rules and tradition which provides so much support can neither heal brokenhearts nor protect others from the terrible fall-out.

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