The
seven children starring in the documentary are; Daniel and Yarko, Shomo,
Moishe, Faraj, Mahmoud and Sanable. Daniel and Yarko are Israeli twins that
life in West Jerusalem. Then we have an orthodox Jewish boy, Shomo, which
spends 12 hours a day studying the Torah. Moishe is the kid who wants to be
Israel’s first religious Prime Minister; he assured that when he runs the
country he would clear Jerusalem of the Arabs. Faraj lives in the Deheishe refugee camp, where at age of 5 he saw getting his best friend getting killed
by an Israeli soldier, from that point on the definition of “Israeli” meant
“murderer” for Faraj. Mahmoud is a supporter of Hamas, where he believes that if
more Jews are killed, the stronger Arabs will be. Lastly we have Sanable, whose
father has been imprisoned by the Israelis because of his outspoken journalism.
When
filming this documentary, the directors proposed a get together with all the
children involved. While interviewing Daniel and Yarko, B.Z Goldberg asked them
if they wanted to meet up with the other kids, when they both agreed Goldberg
called Faraj and made Daniel communicate with him, resulting in a great
adventure. The first connection made was by communicating with each other, even
thought throughout the movie before the connection we see that Faraj has a
strong opinion about the Israelis, you cannot really judge someone before you
meet them.
When
the get together was made, everybody agreed of the meet expect for Shomo. His
life was all about studying, since the government but him in the school and
paid him to study. Shomo created a bubble of comfort, making him
reject communication of anything that went against the Torah. But all the other
kids went, even though Daniel and Yarko were Israelis, Faraj, Sanable, Mahmoud
and Moishe did not care about that after they started to communicate and
started to play together as normal kids should do. When they sat down to talk
about their different life styles, everybody had a better understanding of each
other. Faraj and Moishe saw that not every Israeli is a murderer. When
everybody child was sharing their perspectives and want they have lived through
because of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, communication was establish,
everybody was talking to each other, nobody was pointing fingers at which
religion or belief was wrong to support. There was no judgment at all with in
the conversation of the children. Even though some of the kids have been scared
because of the Israelis actions, they realized that not everybody is as cruel
as the example the soldiers are giving. They realized that the little day spend
together would not kill anybody and they saw that you cannot judge that everybody
has the same mind set, you need to give people a chance before judgment is past
on.
In
the end of the day, Promises is a documentary that has won many awards and has
people inspired, like Julie Salamon, The New York Times to says, “Extraordinary!
Intensely personal and insightful —a humanist’s dream.” Communication is the
key to many doors, the children realized that after they met with each other and interacted with each other. Without communication, outworld would be lost.
Promises - Trailer:
Promises - Trailer: