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'Bethlehem': Story of an Israeli Agent And His Palestinian Informant

Yuval Adler’s film 'Bethlehem' unveils some of the mystery surrounding the work of Shin Bet officers and their relationship with Palestinian informants and in the process reveals the disillusionment of the Israeli left's Oslo generation.
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It was impossible not to notice the unusual sight at the festive screening of the feature film Bethlehem in the Jerusalem Cinematheque: Side by side with the typical Jewish audience that frequents the place, a few dozen Palestinians invited by the film producers were seated in the auditorium. Their presence at the event was a disturbing reminder that they are not commonly seen in the Jerusalem Cinematheque. True, no one bars their entry, but even without explicit or implicit bans, Palestinians and Jews are rarely seen together in movie theaters, cafés, swimming pools, playgrounds, shopping malls or libraries in Israel.

Bethlehem, by the Israeli director Yuval Adler, has been nominated for 12 Ophir [Israeli Academy of Film and Television] Awards. It describes a close relationship between a Jew and a Palestinian. It is not, however, the type of close relationship envisioned by those who dream of reconciliation and good neighborly relations between the two peoples. 

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