University of Massachusetts Amherst

Film: Paradise Lost

This is the first of two films being shown this week by Palestinian and Israeli women directors exploring the search for identity in a fractured society.

Arab Israeli filmmaker Ebtisam Mara’ana grew up in Paradise (Fureidis in Arabic), a small fishing village overlooking the Mediterranean. One of the few Arab communities remaining after the 1948 war, Fureidis became culturally and politically isolated as Jewish settlements sprung up around it. This thought-provoking and intimate film diary follows the director’s attempt to recreate the village’s lost history, including the story of her childhood hero Suuad, the legendary local “bad girl” who was imprisoned as a PLO activist in the 1970’s and banished from the community. The director’s frustration builds as her questions are resisted, and her hopes soar when she finally meets Suuad, now a Doctor of Law living in the UK. Presenting the rarely heard voice of an Arab Israeli, this important film offers valuable insight into the contradictions and complexities of modern womanhood and national identity in the Middle East.

Presented by the UMass Amherst Office of Jewish Affairs, in conjunction with the Pioneer Valley Jewish Film Festival. Cosponsored by the Interdepartmental Program in Film Studies.

Paradise Lost filmmaker Ebtisam Mara'ana