Queer Cinema for Palestine
LAND/TRUST: A Conversation across Turtle Island and Palestine
November 11, 2021
Organized by SF Ho and Jamelie Hassan
Queer Cinema for Palestine 2021 kicked off with a land acknowledgement by Layla Black and opening remarks by Ghadir al Shafie and Hanan Wakeem of Aswat, Omar Barghouti, co-founder of the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) and the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, Dania Majid of the Toronto Palestine Film Festival, Jonathan Petrychyn of the Toronto Queer Film Festival, QCP’s platform host, filmmaker John Greyson, and artist S F Ho.
Queer Indigenous solidarity was featured in the Embassy Cultural House program, in London, Ontario, with screenings and a panel discussion with filmmakers Indigenous to Turtle Island and Palestine including Qais Assali, Justin Ducharme, Whess Harman, and Rana Nazzal, moderated by Wanda Nanibush.
In a powerful screening and subsequent panel, filmmakers Indigenous to Turtle Island and filmmakers from Palestine share how they negotiate complex and intersecting relationships to land, home, queerness, labour, art-making, and representation.
Press from Hyperallergic:
Challenging Israeli Narratives About Queer Palestinian Culture by Munir Atalla |
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FILM PROGRAM
All films screened during the Queer Cinema for Palestine program were available from November 11, 2021 to November 20, 2021.
SOMETHING FROM THERE
Rana Nazzal, 2020, Palestine / Turtle Island, 7 min A short film on the substance of our original lands. Weaving between the voices of the artist’s parents, the film is personal, yet evokes a shared Palestinian experience. The “something from there” is never named, though it is at the heart of the narrative. Is it a piece of land? The soil? The remains of our ancestors? The distinction between land and body is not made, and rather, Something from there focuses on the power of memory and symbols to revive a denied homeland, defy official histories, and counter the settler colonial impetus to erase any assertion of Indigenous life. |
Rana Nazzal Hamadeh is a Palestinian-Canadian artist immersed in community organizing both on Turtle Island and in occupied Palestine. Her photography, film, and installation works look at the complexity of decolonial disruptions, combining storytelling with critical analysis to draw links between lived experience and broader systems. Rana holds an MFA in Documentary Media from Ryerson University and currently works with prisoner justice groups in Palestine.
POSITIONS
Justin Ducharme, 2019, Unceded territories of the xwməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səl̓ílwətaʔɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) peoples, 12 min A simple and naturalistic approach to a day in the life of a two-spirit, male sex worker as he visits his clients. Positions is an unapologetic and realist exploration of sexual desire, the quest for financial stability, and the pursuit of agency over one’s own body. |
Justin Ducharme is a filmmaker, writer, dancer and curator from the small Métis community of St. Ambroise on Treaty 1 Territory. He is the writer/director of four short films and is currently in development on his debut feature. Justin was the recipient of TIFF’s Barry Avrich Fellowship and is an alumni of their 2021 Filmmaker Lab. His writing has been featured in Canadian Art, Room Magazine and Prism International Magazine. He currently lives and works on Unceded Coast Salish Territory.
DAWOUD, YA YONATHAI داود، یا یوناثاي
Qais Assali, 2020, United States, 6 min Using methods of disidentification, queer embodiment, and queering history through queer temporalities, this performative video is an embodiment of Palestinian educator and Arab nationalist, Khalil Al Sakakini, who kept his diaries since 1907. Am I so desperate, Khalil Al Sakakini, to out your dead body, to drag you out of the closet or the grave? This personal question plagues my research, simulating a desire to read Al Sakakini’s lamentations for his “soulmate”, Dawoud, borrowing poetic biblical language, redubbing and conflating his dear friend “David” as Jonathan, who died during Al Sakakini’s one year trip to Brooklyn through an economic depression. |
Qais Assali is an interdisciplinary artist/designer born in Palestine in 1987 and raised in the UAE before returning to Palestine in 2000. His works with photography, video, performance, and in the archives seek to engage and subvert national geopolitical power dynamics. He is currently an Andrew W. Mellon Assistant Professor of Digital Design at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee. Assali taught in visual communication at Al-Ummah University College, Jerusalem, and at An-Najah National University, Nablus. He was a 2019-21 Core Fellow at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. He was a 2018-19 Artist/Designer-in-Residence for the Critical Race Studies Program at Michigan State University
LAND/TRUST
Whess Harman, 2021, Unceded xwməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam) territory, 17 min LAND/TRUST is a performance piece between Whess Harman, a member of the Carrier Wit’at nation (federally amalgamated under the Lake Babine Nation by the colonial government), and the ancestral, unceded territory of the Musqueam people. The performance takes place in what is now known as Pacific Spirit Regional Park, a park established in 1989 as a natural forest preserve. Originally envisioned as a performance on the artist’s home territories, the work evolved into a hopeful request for the land to help carry grief across the distance between the home made, and the home that is difficult to return to. |
Whess Harman is Carrier Wit’at, a nation amalgamated by the federal government under the Lake Babine Nation. They graduated from emily carr university’s BFA program in 2014 and are currently living and working on the territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh as the curator at grunt gallery. Their multidisciplinary practice includes beading, illustration, text, poetry and curation. As a mixed-race, trans/non-binary artist they work to find their way through a tasty plethora of some kind of undiagnosed attention deficit disorder, colonial bullshit and queer melancholy. To the best of their patience, they do this with humour and a carefully mediated cynicism that the galleries go hog wild for.
Presented by Embassy Cultural House in co-operation with Dar Jacir in Bethlehem, grunt gallery in Vancouver, BC, Queer Caucus at Western University, London Ontario, and Woodland Cultural Centre in Brantford, ON
Queer Cinema for Palestine is organized by Aswat – Palestinian Feminist Center for Sexual and Gender Freedoms, the Toronto Queer Film Festival and the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel, together with dozens of partners around the world.
Queer Cinema for Palestine is organized by Aswat – Palestinian Feminist Center for Sexual and Gender Freedoms, the Toronto Queer Film Festival and the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel, together with dozens of partners around the world.