Udi Aloni

Udi Aloni

Udi Aloni October, 2008
Born (1959-12-10) 10 December 1959
Israel
Occupation Filmmaker, Writer

Udi Aloni (Hebrew: אודי אלוני; born December 10, 1959) is an Israeli American filmmaker, writer, visual artist and political activist whose works focus on the interrelationships between art, theory, and action. He is one of three sons who were born to Israeli politician Shulamit Aloni.

Early career

Aloni began his career as a painter, establishing the Bugrashov gallery in Tel Aviv, a home for contemporary art, cultural and political events. While living in New York in the 1990s, his work in large-scale art led him to invent a method for advertising on urban architectural structures.

Film making

Local Angel

In 1996, Aloni began making films. His documentary, Local Angel (2002), and his first feature-length fiction, Forgiveness (2006), are both radical interpretations of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that have stirred controversy in the Middle East and internationally. Aloni also directed Kashmir: Journey to Freedom (2008), a documentary about the nonviolent movement for liberation and freedom in Jammu and Kashmir that opened in the Berlin International Film Festival. Other films include Left (1996) and Art/Violence (2013), as well as Innocent Criminals (2004), a music video with DAM (band), Palestinian rap group.

Aloni was the head cinema coach in the Freedom Theatre of the Jenin Refugee Camp. After the 2011 murder of Juliano Mer Khamis, the founder and head of The Freedom Theater, Aloni directed an Arabic adaptation of Waiting for Godot with the Freedom Theatre's graduate students, a production that toured to New York.

Reception

Aloni's films have been presented in various leading film festivals and universities, among them the Berlin International Film Festival, the Toronto International Film Festival, the Tokyo International Film Festival, the Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema, and the Jerusalem Film Festival. Forgiveness (2006), which took the audience award at the Woodstock Film Festival in 2006,[1] was described by Slavoj Žižek as "maybe the most beautiful, powerful and important film ever made about the tragedies of the region."[2] Its theatrical release in the United States opened with Mariam Said, the widow of late Edward Said, reading the poetry of Mahmoud Darwish.

In 2007, Aloni was a Jury Member for the Manfred Salzgeber Award in the Panorama section of the Berlin International Film Festival in Berlin, Germany. His film Junction 48 received the Panorama audience award at the 2016 Berlin Film Festival.[3]

Some of Aloni's films have drawn sharp criticism. Jerusalem Post movie critic Hannah Brown wrote of Aloni's film Forgiveness, "There isn't an award for the most pretentious and annoying movie ever made, but if there were, I'd put my money on Forgiveness. Writer/director Udi Aloni really does deserve some kind of prize for the energy with which he has melded tired cliches, smug pseudo-intellectualism and humorless far left-wing politics into a single movie."[4]

The film Forgiveness (2006), which had its Middle-Eastern premiere in Ramallah, recently stirred up controversy when the Israeli embassy in Paris threatened to withdraw funding from the Israeli Film Festival in Paris (Israelien de Paris) should they open the festival with the film.[5] Aloni (along with Naomi Klein, John Greyson, and others) was an initiator of the Toronto Declaration, a petition to protest plans to "host a celebratory spotlight on Tel Aviv" because according to the petitioners doing so constitutes "staging a propaganda campaign" on behalf of "an apartheid regime.".[6]

Writings

Aloni's book, What Does a Jew Want?: On Binationalism and Other Specters (Columbia University Press, 2011), includes conversations and comments by French philosopher Alain Badiou, philosophy professor Judith Butler, and philosopher and cultural critic Slavoj Žižek.[7] The book spans the fields of theology and psychoanalysis, literature and philosophy.

Aloni's book Gilgul Mechilot (Forgiveness, Or Rolling In the Underworld's Tunnels), a collection of stories and pensées, includes his politically charged essays Messianic Manifesto for Binationalism and Reflections on the Coming of the Messiah.[8] Aloni coined the phrases "radical leftist Messianism" and "radical grace" to describe his political ideology, which attempts to identify and analyze the theology of secularism, or the unconscious theological underpinnings of secularist and liberal discourses, specifically in Israel. In Messianic Manifesto for Binationalism,[8] he calls for a radical re-reading of Zionism, stating that "Any attempt to resist the Law of the Father as violent Zionist extremism only strengthens him. […] We must cleanse Zionism of its nationalistic elements without relinquishing its Messianic fervor for liberty, freedom, and equality."

Political views

Aloni promotes replacing Israel with a binational state in Israel-Palestine, and he supports the BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) movement against Israel. He accuses the current Israeli state of apartheid that "in some ways has been crueler in Israel" than in South Africa because "the entire judicial system conceals and cleanses the praxis of government-led apartheid."[9] Aloni has described the ideology and actions of the state of Israel as racist and has called to replace what he calls the ideology of a false "Jewish democracy" with a binational state for all people from the Jordan river to the Mediterranean sea.[10] He supports the BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) movement because he claims it is a means for equal dialogue and it creates a space for nonviolent resistance. He views Palestinians as a "brother ... with whom I share a common identity."[11] and he believes that fidelity to the Israeli people and fidelity to the Palestinian people are one and the same. The slogan "From the River to the Sea all People Must be Free" appears on Aloni's website.[12]

Aloni is a member of the advisory board of Jewish Voice for Peace, an American organization that says it says it "seeks an end to the Israeli occupation of the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, and East Jerusalem,"[13] and which critics say musters Jewish opposition to and works to undermine public support for Israel.[14]

Visual art

Biographical notes & filmography

References

  1. Audience Award Winners Announced for Woodstock FF, Fest21.com, Wednesday, October 18
  2. Jewish Book Week: Forgiveness, Institute of Contemporary Arts, 5 March 2007
  3. McCathie, Andrew (20 February 2016). "Israeli Movies Win Audience Awards at Berlin Film Festival". Haaretz. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  4. Brown, Hannah (21 September 2006). "'Forgiveness' would best be forgotten". Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
  5. Israeli Embassy vs. 'Forgiveness', Ynet.com, Merav Yudilovitch, February 28, 2007
  6. Thank you for your support!, Wednesday, September 16, 2009
  7. What Does a Jew Want?: On Binationalism and Other Specters - Udi Aloni; edited by Slavoj Zizek; conversations and comments by Alain Badiou, Judith Butler, and Slavoj Zizek, Columbia University Press
  8. 1 2 Writings of Udi Aloni and links on him in the official website of Forgiveness
  9. Judge Goldstone’s offensive apology for apartheid, Udi Aloni, Salon.com, Wednesday, November 9, 2011
  10. Philosopher for hire, Udi Aloni, Haaretz, September 9, 2011
  11. Opportunity in a Middle East identity crisis, Mark LeVine, Al Jazeera, October 7, 2011
  12. About, Udi Aloni official website
  13. "JVP Mission Statement". jewishvoiceforpeace.org.
  14. Profile: 'Jewish Voice for Peace,' Anti-Defamation League, 18 November, 2014.
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