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JANUARY 22, 2012 3:27PM

I Saw One Of Those "Must See" Films

Rate: 13 Flag

There's an eternal naiveté about war and it's one that inhabits most its proponents who most claim to know its dangers. As all the world truly is a stage, those with war in their souls must sell that war and thusly turn a blind eye to the true reality of its futility and useless wreckage. That is why even after all this time we still hear (and trust) the chant, "War is hope! Peace is doom!" But there is no ultimate profit to the illusion.

America has a unique war fetish. One day we were walking along and saw a bully beating someone up. We stopped the bully and felt really good about ourselves. Then we saw someone who was thinking of being a bully and so we beat that person up too. Then we someone who looked like a bully to our eyes and so we beat him up too. Until finally, slowly, we became the bully - but in our minds are still doing the Lord's work. That's the illusion of war.

America, of course, is not unique in her self-deception and stupidity about war. Like any drug, the longer you take it the more it corrupts you until you become the very thing you're fighting. You have no choice but to become that to which you give all your energy. And that's how Israel took the "role of the Nazis" in her early 80's siege of Lebanon as described in the animated documentary "Waltz With Bashir".


It has been described as an anti-war film. It is not. It is a pro-truth film, one intent on fact finding. It is the truth that is anti-war. The film's director was a participant in the Lebanon siege but has suppressed his memories of it. Like James Clavell in "King Rat", he must visit the past in order to keep his future. He seeks out his comrades in arms, retracing the descent that led to the Sabra and Shatila massacre.

Here's an abridged Wiki on the event:

The Sabra and Shatila massacre took place in the Sabra and Shatila Palestinian refugee camps in Beirut, Lebanon between September 16 and September 18, 1982, during the Lebanese civil war. Palestinian and Lebanese civilians were massacred in the camps by Christian Lebanese Phalangists while the camp was surrounded by the Israel Defense Force. In that period of time, Israel was at war with the PLO in Lebanon. Israeli forces occupied Beirut, controlled the entrances to the refugee camps of Palestinians and controlled the entrance to the city. The exact number of victims is disputed, from 700–800 to 3,500 (depending on the source).

Israeli forces enabled the entrance of the Christian Phalangist militia to the refugee camps by firing illuminating flares over the camps. The Phalangists were enraged by the assasination of Lebanese Christian president-elect Bashir Gemayel. The forces were under the direct command of Elie Hobeika, who later became a long-serving Member of the Parliament of Lebanon and, in the 1990s, a Lebanese cabinet minister.


Lebanon or Aushwitz?

Janet Lee Stevens, an American journalist, later wrote to her husband, Dr. Franklin Lamb:

"I saw dead women in their houses with their skirts up to their waists and their legs spread apart; dozens of young men shot after being lined up against an alley wall; children with their throats slit, a pregnant woman with her stomach chopped open, her eyes still wide open, her blackened face silently screaming in horror; countless babies and toddlers who had been stabbed or ripped apart and who had been thrown into garbage piles."

In 1982, an independent commission chaired by Sean MacBride concluded that the Israeli authorities or forces were, directly or indirectly, responsible. The Israeli government established the Kahan Commission to investigate, and in early 1983 it found that Israeli military personnel were aware that a massacre was in progress without taking serious steps to stop it. Therefore it regarded Israel as having indirect responsibility. The commission held Ariel Sharon personally responsible for having disregarded the prospect of acts of bloodshed by the Phalangists against the population of the refugee camps and not preventing their entry.



Families lined up against the walls and shot in cold blood. Genocide deja vu. And the director was one of those shooting the flares into the murderous night of screams to enable the slaughter. All the more shocking when he reveals his ancestors were in Auschwitz, another place of genocide. With this he must make peace.

There are no Jews, no Christians, no Islamists, no atheists or agnostics, no blacks, no whites, no Germans, no Americans, no anything - it's sheer hogwash made up in our heads to make our wars seem justified. We are each merely a soul in need of love, nothing more, nothing less. But rare are those who believe that, because to do so means we kill for no reason.



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Next week I'll review Tink's film.
I saw this when it came out. It gave me nightmares, which films rarely did. Mostly the opening scene.

The dogs.

'Nuff said.

Rated.
May be a while before I get this out of my head too, Alan. The dog scene was incredible in its instinctive terror. It even scared my cat and made her hide under the table.

I hope no one thinks I'm anti-Israel here. I'm pro-Israel. But this was an act not only of destruction but of self-destruction - just like we do now in Afghanistan - destroying ourselves in the name of national security.
Yuck. War means death.
Plain and simple Harry.
Now I can have nightmares...
Can't watch them bring them home with me but your last paragraph says it all. I like to think I am one of those who knows but wonder what I can do to teach it to others? Yes we kill for no reason..
Such a horrifying chapter in recent history -- and so little known, commented upon or understood. I will definitely check out the film.
I've seen this film a couple of times. It's available on Netflix. I think everyone should watch it. The fact that it's animated makes it deceptively sanitized, like a cartoon, but it's not. It's subversive just for what you said in your closing paragraph, we are all human, there's no excuse for murder. War is sanctioned murder.
Lack of respect for others; for their humanity, their rights, their customs, their religions, their histories, their homes, their nations, and their property that we covet, has led to us creating an "other" that is ALWAYS "evil" which we, as "good" people, must destroy. That we end up with control of their nation and its resources is, of course, just incidental - yeah, right!

Wars are very, very seldom initiated by "the people"; almost always by "leaders" who represent that tiny fraction of humanity who just cannot seem to exist without grabbing more, more , more of what belongs to others. Power and greed are this small cadre's addictions.

We the people are addicted too. We're addicted to having big brother type governments to provide us with our good life.

Until both addictions are broken, we'll follow the same endless path to destruction.
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The whole middle east is a nightmare, Mission. It's a like a wound in the earth that will not heal.

LL, I always think it's setting the example that teaches. Sometimes just seeing something is possible makes all the difference.

Drew, this one had me knots. I was glad I didn't see it in a theater.

cc, I thought the animation gave it an extra dimension to demonstrate his feelings and that somehow made it more disturbing. Dancing with bullets, what a scene!

Sky, I'd be happy if we just made a rule that only those over 40 can fight in wars. See how many wars we declare then! I understand the mentality that says warring is part of survival, but that's a short sighted view and unpragmatic. There's no end game to it.
Harry,
Exactly right!!
I'd add one more thing. Any government that invades another country ought to be executed by its own people immediately. Every last one of them; no exceptions for any reason. Do you think they could, at last, understand, "start a war - you die"?
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I can't watch movies like that--I can hardly read about them. But even reading about it makes me realize we are more and more like Rome all the time. Overextended, over-militarized, conquering the known universe and defending our borders while the society rots from the inside.
I know what you mean, froggy. Took me three years before I could make myself watch this. I'm glad I did. It was good to find another soul troubled by our world. But yes, I get the same feeling too that we travel headlong down the path of ancient Rome. We never really did rebuke those thugs.
GREAT job, Harry! Being inclined as I am, I saw this one as soon as it was available, long ago.

It lives with me today, as if I saw it yesterday.


-R-
War for peace!!

Got to love it!

RATED!
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────────────────▄████▄ Cheers for this excellent POV.
Atrocity by proxy is still atrocity. We Americans should know. We've done it often enough .
Mark, it's no doubt a great film.

Tink, if we could just get enough war going we'd all be safe!

Algis, thank you very much.

Bob, that's certainly true.
I've always regretted not seeing this film when it was released, even though I knew it would be painful to watch. Your post makes me want to see it even more!
Alysa, the dog scene at the beginning is the worst part. The animations helps provide some distance though. The worst part was dreading what it was his memories might dredge up. Please let me know if you see it!
The homeless shelters of Amerika must show hese films Harry. Better get the taxpayers to subsidize the laziness of those homeless people, so they can be educated up to your standards...wink
A brilliant and brave film. I appreciate sharing that your pro-Israel in your comments. We can separate all the nuances and still come to the same conclusion. "We are each merely a soul in need of love, nothing more, nothing less. But rare are those who believe that, because to do so means we kill for no reason."
Thanks, HNL. I did read it was a controversial film but I didn't find exactly what the controversy was. Probably just the honesty caused an outcry. Certainly a brave film!