Gaza Tragedy
From a meaningless life to a meaningless death...
CAUTION:
Campfire advises that many images in the following program depict human distress and suffering and recommends viewing only by persons over the age of 15.

Dressed-up political propaganda
I found the film Gaza Tragedy very disturbing but not, I suspect, in the way intended by the film’s producers.
The film is a series of photographs that quickly fade from one image into the next. There is hardly a second or two to take in each image, but the overall effect is emotionally devastating (it is good that Campfire has included a warning about this before the start of the film).
The images are increasingly confronting. The opening photos are of tracer bullets and rockets illuminating the sky, with tanks and launchers. Then, in sequence, they show damage to buildings and homes; injuries to people; portraits of the dead; scenes of grief and mourning; faces that show fear and trauma. The focus is almost entirely on children. The final images are of a candle-lit vigil, before the film pauses briefly on two children, backs to the camera, arms over each other’s shoulders, one wearing a kaffiyeh and the other a kippah – the one Palestinian, the other Jewish.
It is impossible not to feel deep pity and sorrow for the people who are suffering in these photos, particularly the children. The images are an assault on our senses. They trap us within the horror we are watching, barraging us with feelings of violence and terror. On this level, the film conveys much more raw emotion than words generally can do.
But I also find myself asking why someone would want to make a film that does that. Do the producers really believe that by mounting a visual assault on the viewer, they will be able to alter the tragic situation in Gaza, to inspire us to make a difference, or at the least to increase our sensitivity or awareness? To put it another way, is there any real hope in the film, a belief that peace is possible?
To my mind, hope is missing from the film. And I believe the reason for this is that there is no attempt to search the reasons for the Israeli incursion into Gaza, no attempt to acknowledge how much Israel also has suffered over several years of violence and vilification against her citizens including her children.
The failure of the film to look beyond the immediate tragedy of Gaza to the deeper tragedy of two peoples unable to reconcile mortal differences suggests to me that there is a disturbing agenda to “Gaza Tragedy”. I believe it is designed to create sympathy for the Palestinians without a corresponding sympathy for the Israelis. It portrays the tragedy in Gaza as completely divorced from political realities and Palestinian children as the victims of pointless, malicious carnage initiated by the Israeli Defence Forces. It seems to be saying that, if only Israel stopped the bombing, Palestinians and Jews could live in peace, because their children would walk hand in hand into the sunset.
I cannot see how such a film can be conducive to the pursuit of peace. On the contrary, because it is so unbalanced I see the film as a real stumbling block to peace. In my view, peace requires sympathy for all the victims, not just the victims in Gaza. It requires both Israeli and Palestinian leaders to accept and acknowledge responsibility for the violence. A film that truly seeks to contribute to peace must show the horror of suicide bombings in Israeli cities, the trauma of several years of rocket attacks on Sderot and other Israeli towns, and the affects of Palestinian terror and violence on Israeli children, alongside images depicting the suffering of Palestinian children in Gaza.
In short, I believe that this film is political propaganda dressed up as a photographic essay about peace.
It may get away with this to some extent because on one level “Gaza Tragedy” is in fact an anti-war film that promotes the basic right of children to grow up free from terror. But, on another and more visceral level it is also a condemnation of Israel – and, I felt, Jews at large (note that kippah in the final clip) - as the unilateral source of violence in the region and the ultimate cause of Palestinian suffering. This simplistic and manipulative view of the suffering of Palestinians in Gaza affronts my moral sensibilities. I believe that their leaders must accept some responsibility for the suffering of their own people, as a result of their long-standing attacks on Israel. There is no sign of this mutuality in the film.
In this light, the final frame is either extremely naïve, or deliberately cynical. It is a cliché to say that Palestinians and Jews should overcome their rivalries and be friends. We all long for this. But there is no longer any hope in simply saying it (either with words or in an image). The real issue is how this is to be achieved. My faith teaches me never to give up hope. I strive for peace not by manipulating images to shock people into making moralistic judgments but by acknowledging that children on both sides of the conflict are suffering from our adult intransigence and reliance on violence.

Haunting
“Haunting” is the word that comes to mind when viewing this film. It is confronting and graphic, conveying the grief, desperation of the innocence, in the face of confrontation in Gaza. The music / song accompanying this film is expressive, and even though I don’t understand the language, it does convey the sadness and hopelessness of the situation. However, the film does go on, with one scene after another of badly injured, many of whom are children, and also image after image of the dead. It does come a point where one have to say “enough is enough”. If that’s what the film-maker wants to achieve, he has certainly done it.

Not to be shown
I strongly recommend that the documentary Gaza Tragedy is not shown to anyone. If the aim is to arouse action to stop wars, one page of stills printed out is enough for raising thinking and discussion.
Put together a documentary with glimpses of from up to 20 countries (a) BEFORE with beautiful buildings and showing one happy family, (b) THEN glimpses of war – tanks, bombs, soldiers, destruction, suffering, (c) THEN of trying to rebuild. Include one scene from each of WW1, Guernica, the Holocaust, Rape of Nanking, Blitz, Stalingrad, Dresden, Hiroshima, Changi, Indian partition, Cambodia, Rwanda, Dafur, Gaza, Iraq, Afghanistan, Congo, then, out of chronology, Thirty Years War, American Civil War, THEN – taking up about as much time – scenes of healing, the struggles of rebuilding and peacemaking, a desert that has never recovered from war, and the final picture of the two little boys, Arab and Israeli together.
Why Gaza Tragedy should not be shown
- I know suffering. I have seen people starve and die in a gutter. Family and friends have suffered and worked in wars and their aftermaths, including in Gaza and Israel. How to arouse those who have never suffered? Not by Gaza.
- Images do not convey reality when they become too common. Western children and adults have seen tens of thousands of incidents of violence, war, horror, suffering, and grief on film and TV. Now many can’t tell the difference between reality and entertainment. TV-savvy teenagers can discuss a road safety film in terms of what grisly scene gave them the biggest buzz: ‘I liked the bit where his guts fell out.’
- Horror scenes of mutilation, death and grief have become so popular in the media that they’ve become cheap. The psychodynamics of response to so much are often unhealthy, even pathological. They include titillation and fascination, and defensive mechanisms of becoming callous, identifying with the aggressors, and needing ever more horror to have an impact. The sensitive – young and old – can have horror images stuck in their psyches, that they cannot forget. It’s a form of child abuse. So much blood.
- Imagination deadens with too much horror. (Do viewers imagine the grieving mourners with cameras in their faces?)
- The film may be intended to be a discussion-starter, but my other recommendation for a documentary (or project) would be far better. A film relying solely on emotions can prevent thinking and finding out more about what can be done and trying to do it.It puts too much upon the leader of any discussion, who may not be up to it.
- Film like this is NOT ‘more eloquent’ than the written word. It omits both faith and reason. The written word can explain so much more eloquently, thatit is essential that schools teach book literacy. B.O.O.K.s are Bodies of Organized Knowledge; poetry can arouse thinking that stays in the mind. This generation sees thousands of films and treats them as forgettables.
- My ‘gut’ reaction is that there is too much of this sort of graphic imagery, which can become ‘entertainment’. My intellectual reaction is that piling uphorrors smothers thoughtful responses.The final glimpse of two Arab and Israeli children is necessary – but a bit glib.
- How the film relates to my faith and understanding.Original Stupidity is as dangerous as original sin. The present over-emphasis on emotions (so easy) is at the expense of both faith and reason (difficult). The fact that a film is made like this, just piling on horror and voyeurism of suffering, needs thinking about. People need to think more about what they are doing, even when they intend good.In war, too, the perpetrators of evil may think they intend good.
- Questions to anyone thinking of showing this film.Think of your aim, and find some another way to do it. For examples, the The Costs of War film that I suggest can also be done as a project with research, as well as a documentary.Examine war and hatred in the Bible and in history – yes.The causes of wars – yes.Even more, study how peace has been made in the past, and how it might be made now. For example, the generosity of the Marshall Plan contrasted with the viciousness of the WW1 reparations. The lands sowed with salt, and whether today’s far greater destruction by wars may never be repaired.
- ‘One picture can say more than a thousand pictures’. There is one memorable picture from the Vietnam War. A thousand pictures numb.
- ‘I have set before you life and death.Therefore choose life’. Today evil gets far more publicity than good.(Discuss).One reason is that images of evil have more impact than mediocre images of good - check the Bible warnings images. For example, think of a happy family party. A photograph can show its happiness. But on TV it would be boring. Actors have a far harder time acting goodness than badness, so they can prefer acting badness.
- How can youth today be enthusiastic about goodness? And know about the goodness in the world, not be overcome by the evil? About taking intelligent action rather than escapes? See faces in school classrooms – defensive, sullen, mocking, peer-driven, making self-destructive choices.How many of them see the world as a place where cruelty and greed win out? What rules in their imaginations? How can they learn that life being fully lived is far different and better than images on screens?
Both reason and faith are needed to live with love and hope in a world that demands from us constant struggle. Those three essentials of St Paul need constant remembering. Campfire does have short films on Hope, and some of them include desperate situations, that show how hope is a force, not just sentimentality.

Can sense be made of this?
[Gaza Tragedy] Relentless and uncompromising, to turn away and disengage would be to take the easy option. The lack of guided commentary was at first frustrating: give me a voice-over to make sense of this, offer a perspective to help me shape my own... yet, on reflection, the absence of this device forced me, the viewer, to make sense of it for myself. If sense can be made of this? And perhaps it is this question that makes its greatest impact. The images build to a climax before a short collection of hopeful images that conclude. Hope is brief and is far outweighed by the brutality of the images presented that make up the majority of the film, yet hope is still present. Hope is fragile, like the pigeon held in the hands of the children, like the naked flame of the candle, yet hope - even just a glimmer - reinterprets violence and challenges us to move beyond.
Do I fail to see God here? It is an easy temptation to turn away and add to the claim that where there is suffering so there God cannot be. Yet I see God in the suffering. I see God in the parent who mourns, the neighborhood which is lost and the sky which frames the devastation. I also see the opportunity for each of us to reflect the nature of God in response to suffering. To comfort. To assist. To mourn with. To never, never, give up the questioning and wrestling with God. From my faith perspective, hope is necessary. But hope cannot be a far-off distant promise that is divorced from the reality of the present moment. Hope draws me in and introduces me to something beyond myself. Hope is in its nature communal. I cannot be an observer to violence and do nothing without first giving up on hope. A hope shared brings me to questions of "What can I do?" and "Where is my part in this?" (even as I witness it from the other side of the world). It is only when I live out the response to these questions that I continue to live consistently with my faith.
Just wanted to agree with
Just wanted to agree with you and add that whenever we decide to turn away it seems like we are also to blame.We are part of this world and in times like ours we could be images on this pictures,i was and many that i know.I am Bosnian and people should know better,learn from their mistakes,but no one cares as long is not about them..
Why it was made
I can answer the question asked by Fred Morgan, why this film was made. It was made so that we could experience a minimal fraction of what constitutes the nature of the entire life and existence of the people in the video. You're not supposed to approach it like a Hollywood film you don't get the point of, although maybe someone not capable of fathoming its reality will feel like it's just another poorly made Hollywood movie, or something on TV, and critique it as such.
Having experienced a minimal fraction of what it is like to live under those conditions, one might feel compelled to take action to alleviate the suffering of those children.

"Everyone has the right to life..."
"The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing…"
~Albert Einstein
This documantary is just about Gaza tragedy. The aim of the film is not either taking side or creating sympathy. The aim is to provide feeling for this tragedy which is known by all the world, developing empathy for the victims of this wild war and expressing the reaction against the violence. It is a moral responsibility to develop empathy for the people -regardless of their religion and ethnicity- who are exposed to violence. Right to life is the most divine right. There can not be any reason for the violence.
*****
Peace is always possible. Life must be lived forward. If what we demand is not the symbolic but a real peace, we should face the pain of the people who are suffered from war and develop empathy for their pains. Without feeling their pains in our heart, we can not feel the tragedy of the victims. If the humankind had developed the empathy for the pains of Jewish people who were exposed to the genocide within the years 1940-1945 and had felt the pain that the people had in Auschwitz and Birkenau, there would not have been genocides in the world anymore. If the wildness in Hiroshima had been conceived, no bombs would have been dropped over again.
*****
If the world nations did not keep silent to the massacre in Rwanda and Srebrenica, the children and the other people in Gaza and Darfur would not have been killed brutally. Searching for a reason to these inhuman images is just supposed to legitimate the wildness of the war. These images are selected from the photos taken by international news agencies. Most of them can be found on the website of UN. These photos are surely very disturbing and cut to the heart of the ones who say “i am human”. It is not the first time the images of war victims are displayed in a movie. The photos of war victims are always displayed in world press and exhibited at the museums. But when it comes to Gaza, somebodies find it wrong to share these images. This is an unethical biased attitude.
*****
Most of the photos of The Pulitzer and World Press Photo Prizes, which are regarded as the most important press prizes, are the images of war and hunger victims. While selecting the photos for this film, ethic rules are followed and the humiliating and racist photos were not included. The images of entrails of the victims were not included in this movie even though those images had been shown on world press. This documentary is a peace call to those who had lost their faith for peace after watching these inhuman images on TVs. Despite everything, peace is always possible. The people of Israel and Palestine who have to live together should understand each other.
*****
The responsibles of both this inhuman attack against Gaza and the terrorist attacks against Israel should be judged at international courts. No discrimination is made among the war victims in this film. It was Gaza tragedy being in question, because that is why only the images related to this process had been used in this film. All the children photos of international news agencies had been benefited from without discriminating. There are the images of Israeli children in this movie as well.
*****
It is immoral to make discrimination among the war victims. It is injustice to characterize this film as a propaganda. Can the ones who find this film political show me even one political symbol in the film? Have they ever watched a more unbiased movie about Gaza tragedy before? Searching for a reason to these images is a kind of inhumanity. Neither people of Israel nor the people of Palestine are responsible for these images. Everybody knows who are the responsibles. Blood feeds the hate and hate feeds the blood. First of all, we need to be against the violence. Once again, the main purpose of this film is developing empathy for the victims of this brutal wildness. The main purpose is to make the people feel this inhuman tragedy. The aim is the reaction against war and violence. All individuals who have not lost their humanistic emotions should react to these images and give hand to the war victims, especially to the disabled children. This film aims to make the people feel the trauma which is caused by war on human soul. There is only one message of the film and that is "peace".
*****
There is no undoing of the death of a child…There is no undoing of death…
What are title of the songs?
Please can you tell me them?
This video is incredible.
Words aren't enough.

GOD Bless Palestine..
GOD Bless Palestine..
'n' help them ..
PEACE !!
Shocking!!
I'm not sure what to say about this 'shocking'short film. It seems almost wrong to watch it, something's should not be seen unless at the same time some sort of decision is made to do something about them. These images are not for the faint at heart.My world may as well be a million miles away. I have no idea what it is like to have to live through this day in and day out.I don't have any idea what the solution is to this problem, one that is so immense, one that has its roots way back in the Abrahamic period. Religion seems to be the cause of so many wars, and at the same time is never the solution in stopping wars.
Muy bueno!!!
Imágenes terribles.
Muy buen comentario.
Exelente tema, buen mensaje te felicito.
Stop violating human rights.
Paz! Peace!
Suffering
I could not watch the end of the film. How cruel people can be! I am so sad. I cried.
I live in Israel. I want peace. We both want peace , dont we?
I hate living like that, we both dont like it. I want to stop the wars.
I want PEACE, only PEACE
I wish one day Arabs and Jews will live together with peace.
I am realy really sorry! But theres nothing i can do alone...
It is interesting to me that
It is interesting to me that a society so engrossed in its daily comforts shows such adverse responses when exposed to realities and truths that are outside of its comfort zones.
Perhaps before we pass judgment on the intent of the filmmaker we should learn to separate the way the film makes us feel from the intent of a person we don't know and haven't asked for ourselves about his or her intent.
Perhaps we should just care about the people in the film.


Primal scream therapy
[From May'09 intro] Gaza Tragedy could be seen as the equivalent to primal scream therapy. It consists entirely of photographic stills depicting the horrific injuries of children sustained from the conflict in Gaza. If the filmmaker’s intent is solely to create an intense visceral and emotional response in the viewer, he has succeeded.