


‘Langue Étrangère’ Review: A Tough and Tender Romance Between Two Teen Girls Finding Each Other in Translation
February 28, 2024


‘Ordinary Angels’ Review: Hilary Swank Plucks Heartstrings Expertly in Inspirational Drama
February 29, 2024A collective of Israeli and Palestinian filmmakers helm a project about the Israeli government’s attempts to expel Palestinians in Masafer Yatta.
No Other Land
A devastating portrait.
One of the many devastating moments in No Other Land, a jolting documentary created by a collective of Palestinian and Israeli filmmakers, is a scene of bulldozers demolishing the only school in Masafer Yatta, a rural village in the occupied West Bank.
The people of Masafer Yatta built this school together despite multiple attempts to stop them. Earlier in the film, Adra recounts how his mother devised a plan to circumvent the Israeli Defense Forces’ antagonism. She instructed women and children to work at the construction site during the day, while the men took over at night. Darkness would give them security and shroud them from the army.
No Other Land is a documentary about who wields power under occupation. The film, which premiered at this year’s Berlin Film Festival, is a sobering offering for this politically urgent moment. For the last four months, the world has witnessed the destruction of Gaza and increased violence in the West Bank. The Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip following Hamas’ cross-border raid on Oct. 7 has killed more than 28,000 Palestinians (many of them women and children), displaced 80 percent of the area’s population and provoked a ghastly humanitarian crisis. Recently, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened a ground invasion of Rafah, the city where the government previously ordered more than a million Palestinians to seek shelter. The events in Gaza have emboldened Israelis in the West Bank, leading to a surge in settler violence against Palestinians there. According to the U.N., the area is facing its own economic and humanitarian crisis too.
No Other Land focuses on the decades-long legal battles, chronic injustices and daily humiliations faced by Palestinians in the West Bank. It shows the impact of 75 years of occupation, from checkpoints and permits to racist laws and policies. The documentary, like the school in Masafer Yatta, is modest in appearance but channels a radical spirit.
Adra, a lawyer, journalist and activist from Masafer Yatta, and Yuval Abraham, an Israeli journalist, are our interlocutors and their conversations about state-sanctioned inequalities make up a majority of No Other Land. The doc, which they both helped direct, edit and produce, is also filled with images — sometimes gruesome, frequently frightening and always shattering — chronicling the displacement of the Palestinians in Masafer Yatta. Interspersed throughout is footage of military intimidation and Israeli settler violence, shot by Adra, Abraham and the other two members of their collective, Palestinian photographer Hamdan Ballal and Israeli cinematographer and editor Rachel Szor. These elements are held together by an unfussy visual language; the straightforward cuts maintain the integrity of the events unfolding on screen.
The film is organized by seasons and opens in the summer of 2019. Military tanks and IDF soldiers roll into Masafer Yatta as Palestinian residents rush to collect their belongings. Some families transfer their livelihoods — mattresses, clothes and food — into caves. Adra and Abraham meet in the midst of this devastation, and their first encounter is weighted by the realities of their differences. As Adra leads Abraham to meet some members of the community, he asks the Israeli journalist to be sensitive with his people.
Adra measures his life by moments of resistance instead of years. Through a voiceover, we learn that the young lawyer descends from a family of activists. He has inherited a struggle, and in No Other Land, we see how Adra must negotiate a present defined by the same battles as his parents. He spends his days organizing protests and demonstrations; documenting abuse against Palestinians by the IDF; and later, when Masafer Yatta’s story gets more attention, sitting for interviews with international press. The film doesn’t shy from the tense conversations between Abraham and Adra about how racist policies impact their lives. Whereas Abraham can move freely throughout the country, Adra is restricted, surveilled and harassed by authorities.
No Other Land also chronicles the tragic story of Harun Abu Aram, a young man shot in the neck by an Israeli soldier who tried to confiscate his electric generator. The attack paralyzed him and Harun spent the final two years of his life living in a cave, where conditions only increased his suffering. In the film, we see his mother Farisa trying her best to care for him while fielding questions from journalists eagerly writing down her story without, it seems, understanding her pain. There’s no shortage of stories like Harun and Farisa’s in No Other Land, which shows the ubiquity of injustices against Palestinians. The film stays close to its subjects and testifies to the resilience of the Masafer Yatta community. It takes courage and conviction to rebuild after every act of destruction.