Sunday May 11, 10:46 PM
Gaza cartoon commemorates Palestinian "Nakba"
GAZA (Reuters) - Jewish fighters are shown shooting
Palestinians and bombing their villages in an animated film by
Gaza-based women marking 60 years since Israel was founded and
hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were displaced.
"The Tale of a Key" describes the Jews as "enemies of the
religion and enemies of the homeland" and is meant to highlight
what the illustrators called the "holy" right of dispossessed
Palestinians to return to land that is now part of Israel.
The women behind the film, who run a production company in
the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, say they are not politically
aligned but want to teach Palestinian children and adults about
the events that drove them from their homeland.
"It tells of the suffering, the killing and displacement,"
said Moamena Abu Hamda, director of the JohaToon company in
Gaza City. "It shows that the Palestinian people did not leave
their land by their own will but they were forced to do it."
Hamas's Al-Aqsa Television drew Israeli and international
censure last year for using cartoons and puppet-shows featuring
Mickey Mouse and Lion King lookalikes to illustrate the
Islamist movement's battle against Israel, which it does not
recognize.
JohaToon plans to screen the 32-minute film, which it says
is for adults as well as children, in Gaza this month and hopes
to market it in other Arab countries and further afield.
Some 700,000 Palestinians fled or were expelled from their
homes in the war that led to the founding of Israel in 1948.
About 4.5 million refugees and their descendents now live in
squalid camps in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, the Gaza Strip and the
occupied West Bank.
Most of the Gaza Strip's 1.5 million residents are either
refugees or their descendants and live in eight densely
populated camps and four cities.
Refugees cling to a "right of return" and their fate is one
of the thorniest issues facing negotiators who are trying to
reach a deal this year to create a Palestinian state in Gaza
and the West Bank -- land Israel occupied in 1967 Middle East
war.
While Israel celebrates its 60th birthday with fireworks,
parties and military display this month, Palestinians hold
rallies to mourn the "Nakba," or "catastrophe" of displacement
and to highlight the refugee problem.
Abu Hamda insisted "The Tale of the Key" -- which refers to
the keys many Palestinians carry as symbols of their lost homes
-- was not meant to incite violence against Israelis but to
recount stories passed down from previous generations.
"We have laid down facts as we heard them from our
grandfathers and grandmothers," Abu Hamda told Reuters. "We
told the tale as we heard and as people saw it."
(Editing by Giles Elgood)
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