For one night only: Gaza’s first proper cinema in 3 decades

For one night only: Gaza’s first proper cinema in 3 decades
Palestinians attend the screening of ‘10 Years’ at Samer Cinema in Gaza City on Saturday. (AFP)
Updated 26 August 2017
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For one night only: Gaza’s first proper cinema in 3 decades

For one night only: Gaza’s first proper cinema in 3 decades

GAZA CITY: Several hundred Gazans went to the cinema on Saturday for the first time in more than 30 years, albeit for one night only.
The long-abandoned Samer Cinema in Gaza City, the oldest in the strip but closed for decades, hosted a special screening of a film about Palestinians in Israeli prisons.
About 300 people of both sexes attended, with men and women not segregated by gender and despite the lack of air-conditioning on a hot and humid evening.
The Hamas group has ruled Gaza for 10 years, and there are currently no functioning cinemas in the Palestinian territory where 2 million people live in cramped conditions under an Israeli blockade.
Ghada Salmi, an organizer, told AFP the one-night showing was “symbolic” of wider efforts “to bring back the idea of cinema to Gaza.”
Jawdat Abu Ramadan, a member of the audience, said he wanted to see a permanent cinema in Gaza.
“We need to live like humans, with cinemas, public spaces and parks,” he said.
The Samer Cinema was built in 1944 but shut in the 1960s. The enclave’s remaining cinemas closed in the late 1980s during the first Palestinian intifada, or uprising.
There was a fire at one cinema in 1987, which was widely thought to have been the work of hard-liners who consider cinema ungodly.
“The rest of the cinemas were scared to show films after that,” Salmi said.
Ironically, according to French historian Jean-Pierre Filiu’s “A History of Gaza,” the Muslim Brotherhood’s Gaza branch — from which Hamas sprang — held its founding conference at the Samer Cinema on the Islamic new year in 1946.
“Ten Years,” the feature-length film screened on Saturday, was made in Gaza with volunteer actors and tells the story of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.
Salmi said it does not focus on the wider politics of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, instead telling a human story.
Saturday’s showing went ahead with the approval of Hamas.
Nermin Ziara, who appeared in the film, said he wanted to see a cinema open as “society needs to develop through films and documentaries.”
Ziara said he did not think Hamas should or would block such moves.
“I don’t think there is a problem with opening a cinema with Hamas as it is a place of art,” he told AFP.
“We as Palestinians need to have a large space for art.”