The Israel Film Service Collection

Your land will be measured and divided up

52 Minutes, 1997
Genre:
Documentary

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Directed by: Amnon Teitelbaum
Production:Amnon Teitelbaum
Production Company:Israel Film Service
Photographer: Roni Katzanelson, Meni Elias, Claudio Steinberg, , Dror Vainer
Original Music: Ilan Harel
Language: Hebrew
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Subtitles: English, Hebrew

A documentary produced by the Israel Film Service, in the Border series whose seven episodes were all helmed by different directors. In each instalment, the series explores a different aspect of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in the days following the Oslo Accords.
Is coexistence between Jews and Arabs possible in the West Bank?
The film tries to answer this question by focusing on settlers in the Jewish settlement of Tekoa, and examining how they view coexistence alongside the local Arab population and members of the Bedouin Ta’amra tribe, in the time after the signing of the Oslo Accords.
Initially, it appears that coexistence is achievable, and many of the residents aspire to it while maintaining a positive relationship with the local population. However, as time passes and the second part of the Oslo Accords is signed, security in the settlement deteriorates, terrorist attacks increase, the distancing between the settlers and the Israeli left political movement grows, Rabin’s assassination tears their community apart, and many of them begin to abandon the idea of coexistence.
The film features two prominent characters: the settlement’s rabbi, Menachem Froman, who passionately believes in economic, human, and cultural coexistence, and Salah Ta’mari, a senior member of the Fatah movement and a Palestinian activist.

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