The Prague Post - TV writer Hagai Levi: boycott risks hitting Israel's critical voices

EUR -
AED 4.193072
AFN 73.072107
ALL 93.838116
AMD 419.736304
ANG 2.04419
AOA 1047.551391
ARS 1699.204723
AUD 1.646369
AWG 2.058002
AZN 1.953333
BAM 1.955866
BBD 2.300048
BDT 140.753545
BGN 1.930561
BHD 0.430511
BIF 3400.285632
BMD 1.141749
BND 1.477331
BOB 7.920304
BRL 5.914604
BSD 1.142024
BTN 108.878742
BWP 15.427334
BYN 3.307869
BYR 22378.275571
BZD 2.296768
CAD 1.623624
CDF 2564.367493
CHF 0.920095
CLF 0.026762
CLP 1053.274605
CNY 7.751447
CNH 7.761591
COP 3819.355096
CRC 520.315382
CUC 1.141749
CUP 30.256342
CVE 110.267294
CZK 24.157237
DJF 203.367793
DKK 7.474801
DOP 67.551701
DZD 152.107505
EGP 55.781963
ERN 17.126231
ETB 184.324249
FJD 2.557803
FKP 0.855115
GBP 0.855455
GEL 3.008467
GGP 0.855115
GHS 13.013499
GIP 0.855115
GMD 82.778435
GNF 10016.339978
GTQ 8.714258
GYD 238.889155
HKD 8.954907
HNL 30.56677
HRK 7.535774
HTG 149.233105
HUF 353.428898
IDR 20568.603796
ILS 3.442544
IMP 0.855115
INR 108.908616
IQD 1496.037676
IRR 1570989.197913
ISK 144.008896
JEP 0.855115
JMD 180.616131
JOD 0.809491
JPY 185.343496
KES 147.628526
KGS 99.845729
KHR 4582.175596
KMF 492.093588
KPW 1027.574278
KRW 1748.165553
KWD 0.354422
KYD 0.951782
KZT 539.803594
LAK 25751.761301
LBP 102265.72329
LKR 382.509633
LRD 207.287929
LSL 18.529448
LTL 3.371287
LVL 0.690632
LYD 7.327152
MAD 10.692163
MDL 20.134742
MGA 4850.143385
MKD 61.643043
MMK 2397.392256
MNT 4090.163743
MOP 9.226698
MRU 45.579547
MUR 53.742403
MVR 17.651448
MWK 1979.875872
MXN 19.961445
MYR 4.664003
MZN 72.968944
NAD 18.529367
NGN 1563.430906
NIO 42.021058
NOK 11.233872
NPR 174.208676
NZD 2.008125
OMR 0.439004
PAB 1.142034
PEN 3.888698
PGK 5.018104
PHP 70.265468
PKR 317.502096
PLN 4.2881
PYG 6927.235126
QAR 4.174942
RON 5.230807
RSD 117.36147
RUB 88.687626
RWF 1673.644759
SAR 4.29122
SBD 9.200829
SCR 16.628618
SDG 685.617512
SEK 11.015238
SGD 1.476778
SHP 0.852431
SLE 27.80145
SLL 23941.904673
SOS 652.65645
SRD 42.890908
STD 23631.894018
STN 24.500724
SVC 9.992208
SYP 126.199885
SZL 18.525467
THB 38.045316
TJS 10.563605
TMT 4.007538
TND 3.378315
TOP 2.749057
TRY 53.458998
TTD 7.733229
TWD 36.58985
TZS 2997.09387
UAH 50.922559
UGX 4172.086799
USD 1.141749
UYU 45.941559
UZS 13755.466893
VES 729.467012
VND 30027.99222
VUV 135.861228
WST 3.166282
XAF 655.982138
XAG 0.018352
XAU 0.000275
XCD 3.085633
XCG 2.058152
XDR 0.814319
XOF 655.970647
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.651561
ZAR 18.535897
ZMK 10277.112319
ZMW 21.041622
ZWL 367.642633
  • RBGPF

    -4.1100

    61.5

    -6.68%

  • BCE

    -0.1250

    21.295

    -0.59%

  • NGG

    -0.3700

    82.48

    -0.45%

  • RIO

    -0.5700

    93.85

    -0.61%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    22.25

    +0.45%

  • RYCEF

    0.3400

    20.09

    +1.69%

  • JRI

    0.0800

    13.08

    +0.61%

  • AZN

    -6.7000

    188.45

    -3.56%

  • BCC

    -1.6700

    74.26

    -2.25%

  • VOD

    -0.0650

    13.085

    -0.5%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    37.33

    -0.19%

  • BTI

    -0.5100

    61.26

    -0.83%

  • RELX

    0.1850

    32.115

    +0.58%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.04

    +0.23%

  • GSK

    -0.7550

    52.905

    -1.43%

TV writer Hagai Levi: boycott risks hitting Israel's critical voices
TV writer Hagai Levi: boycott risks hitting Israel's critical voices / Photo: JACK GUEZ - AFP

TV writer Hagai Levi: boycott risks hitting Israel's critical voices

Acclaimed Tel Aviv-based TV screenwriter Hagai Levi says many artists like him want to leave Israel because of the Gaza war, fearing the consequences of a gathering cultural boycott of their country.

Text size:

Levi, writer of a string of TV hits including "Scenes from a Marriage", "The Affair" and "In Treatment", is an outspoken critic of Israel's siege of Gaza and understands international anger over the issue.

But he worries that calls for a boycott of Israel will end up stifling domestic voices that are critical of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the politician has singled Levi out for criticism in the past.

"Everyone around me is talking about the possibility of leaving" Israel, the 62-year-old told AFP this month at the Venice Film Festival, where he presented his latest series "Etty".

"It's just so hard to leave... people are asking 'how will I find work? Will I find friends? Will I find family?'" he said, adding that he expected "many" to emigrate in the coming years.

The August 27-September 6 Venice festival saw a collective of independent Italian filmmakers call on organisers to cancel invitations for actors Gerard Butler and Gal Gadot over their past support for the Israeli military.

Since then, thousands of film figures, including Emma Stone, Joaquin Phoenix and Olivia Colman, have signed a pledge to cut ties with any Israeli institutions supported by the government.

Levi keeps a home close to his children, mother and sisters in Tel Aviv but spends most of his time in Europe or Hollywood, where he has helped open doors for other Israeli productions.

Regarding pro-government entertainment figures, he said "you cannot be part of what's going on, knowingly and supportively, and think that there's not going to be consequences. That makes no sense".

"But there should be a distinction... I would say 90 percent of people in the artistic community in Israel, whether it's cinema or plastic arts or music, they are fighting, they're in the streets, and they are suffering because there are no budgets, less freedom of speech.

"They're struggling, and boycotting them is actually weakening them."

Organisers of the boycott movement draw inspiration from the isolation of apartheid South Africa in the 1960s, when many artists refused to perform in the country or maintain links to the white supremacist government.

- 'Dehumanisation' -

Levi's latest series, "Etty", tells the story of 27-year-old Etty Hillesum, a Jewish Dutch woman who wrote detailed diaries about daily life and her spiritual awakening in Nazi-occupied Amsterdam in the early 1940s.

He read "The Diaries of Etty Hillesum" and thought he had come across "something I could talk about for the rest of my life".

But he wanted to avoid producing another conventional Holocaust story about the Jewish experience.

"You cannot just do it the same. It's been done," he said. "You have to take some universal ideas and universal thoughts about it."

He cited Jonathan Glazer's Oscar-winning film "The Zone of Interest", about a Nazi family ignoring the horrors of Auschwitz, as an example of a contemporary re-telling of the Holocaust.

"Etty", starring Austrian actor Julia Windischbauer and created for French-German TV channel Arte, also explores the process of "dehumanising" others to justify violence against them -- something with relevance to the ongoing Gaza conflict.

"What I try to say is that when the value of life becomes so cheap and massive because you kill so many people, then even the value of life of your own citizens becomes nothing," Levi said.

"Etty" is shot against a backdrop of contemporary Amsterdam. Nazi soldiers wear 1940s uniforms, but everyone else wears modern clothes, while modern trams and cars zip around in front of recognisable street furniture from the current era.

"I wanted it to be modern, but not contemporary," Levi said, noting that he excluded mobile phones and computers.

The aim was to unsettle viewers, making them wonder what political repression and persecution might look like today.

"It should speak about every person or every population in distress or in danger," he said.

A.Stransky--TPP