Learn about the history of the Palestinian struggle for freedom, equality and justice by exploring major events in the history of their oppression on this day of the year.
23 April
On this day in 2011, pro-Israel columnist Howard Jacobson “could only laugh in derision at the ludicrous, brainwashed prejudices” of Peter Kosminsky’s 4-part series The Promise. The Israeli Embassy condemned the “worst example of anti-Israel propaganda” ever seen on television. Scores of malicious complaints to Ofcom from the usual suspects were unanimously rejected. The Promise generated numerous rave reviews on its first screening and won Best Drama of 2010/11 at the One World Media Awards.
23 أبريل
في مثل هذا اليوم من عام 2011 ، لم يستطع كاتب العمود الموالي لإسرائيل هوارد جاكوبسون "إلا أن يضحك بسخرية من الأحكام المسبقة السخيفة المضللة والمتحيزة" لسلسلة بيتر كوسمينسكي المكونة من 4 أجزاء ، الوعد. أدانت السفارة الإسرائيلية "أسوأ مثال على الدعاية المعادية لإسرائيل" على الإطلاق على شاشة التلفزيون. ورُفضت بالإجماع عشرات الشكاوى الخبيثة من المشتبه بهم المعتادين والموجهة إلى اف كوم (المكتب المنظم لخدمات الاتصالات) . اثار مسلسل الوعد العديد من التعليقات الحماسية في أول عرض له وفاز بجائزة أفضل دراما لعام 2010/11 في حفل جوائز وسائل الإعلام العالمية.
- "The Promise is probably the thing that in 30 years in television I am most proud of." (Award-winning director Peter Kosminsky)
- Episode 1 ?
Episode 2 https://youtu.be/47SOiPdHoRg
Episode 3 https://youtu.be/qJwGkNgw5wY
Episode 4 ?- Short video (9m25s in) on The Promise with Kosminsky engaging with pompous pro-Israel trolls
- The Promise is an epic series that entranced many Palestinians who had the chance to view it in the UK, along with others astonished by its forthright and honest treatment of Palestine both in the final years of the British mandate and now. As a bold and uncompromising piece of TV scheduling by Channel 4, it was outstanding.
Unsurprisingly the TV presentation of the series outraged several pro-Israel lobby groups although one can wonder if the intensity of their objections might be more due to the sad human reality of the Israeli occupation being brought home more effectively than usual. There is now intense pressure on television regulators in the UK and France to take action. France’s Canal + has already been forced to make concessions by running an announcement prior to each episode to state it is fiction.
What makes The Promise both a gripping yarn and an exquisitely revealing story is the clever device of setting a naive young girl on a quest to retrace the footsteps of her dying grandfather, a British soldier in Mandate Palestine. As she delves into his diary of 1946-48, the story of the soldier’s misfortunes unfolds, and the girl loses her innocence as she is forced to brutally confront the reality of Israel past and present.
On this day in 2011, pro-Israel columnist Howard Jacobson “could only laugh in derision at the ludicrous, brainwashed prejudices” of Peter Kosminsky’s 4-part series The Promise. The Israeli Embassy condemned the “worst example of anti-Israel propaganda” ever seen on television. Scores of malicious complaints to Ofcom from the usual suspects were unanimously rejected. The Promise generated numerous rave reviews on its first screening and won Best Drama of 2010/11 at the One World Media Awards.