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In the film “2048,” Israel no longer exists

Promotional poster for "2048," a film by Yaron Kaftori.

An Israeli director has made a film that imagines a near future in which Israel has ceased to exist, fading into history. Yaron Kaftori’s “2048″ was screened at the Tel Aviv Cinematheque last summer on Tisha b’Av – the date on which observant Jews mourn the destruction of the first and second temples, which preceded the dispersion of the Jewish people into exile. In the year 2048, a young cinematographer travels the world, interviewing Israelis in exile, trying to understand what happened to his grandfather’s country.

The date of the Tel Aviv screening was not coincidental. As Kaftori explains, in this Hebrew-language interview that was screened on Channel 2′s evening news broadcast, the circumstances that led to the first and second exiles of the Jewish people seem startlingly similar to the state of contemporary Israeli society. “How can we not notice this?” wonders the director.

Kaftori is the grandson of one of the founders of Kibbutz Mizra, which is famous in Israel for producing high-quality pork products like smoked ham, bacon and salami. The kibbutz restaurant, which specializes in bacon and egg breakfasts, is popular with Jewish families on Saturdays. But for Kaftori, who is described by the Channel 2 narrator as “salt of the earth: a kibbutz veteran and army officer who served in an elite unit,” Mizra represents a different type of Jewish religion – the religion of secular, social-democratic Zionism – a society that is strong because it values the collective over the individual. In the clip the director speaks about his grandfather, Shmuel, an idealistic pioneer who worked the land, paved a road and helped found a kibbutz.

Kaftori mournfully enumerates the many contemporary issues that illustrate Israel’s decline – the religious-secular divide, the way the state treats foreign workers, the government corruption, the materialism, the drunk driving, the organized crime, the insouciant attitude to petty corruption in everyday life.

The issue Kaftori does not mention is the occupation. This is a rather fascinating oversight, given that the occupation is the one issue that affects every single aspect of Israeli life, society and culture. It would be interesting to ask the director why he neglects to mention it as one of the factors leading to the third exile of the Jewish people in 2048.

Below is my translation of the film synopsis, taken from its website*, followed by the trailer with English subtitles. Click here to view a longer trailer, without subtitles. The film stars some major Israeli actors, including Gila Almagor, the grande dame of Israeli cinema and theater.

The year is 2048. Following the death of his grandfather, Yoju Netzer, a young cinematographer, sets out to complete the documentary film his grandfather began 40 years earlier.

The film “2048″ is about Israel in its centennial year.

 But in the year 2048, the Israel we know does not exist anymore. The Israeli government has collapsed and the Jewish residents of Israel are scattered around the world. The reason for the collapse is never explained clearly; nor is it the most important part of the film. Instead, it is hinted at in ways that lead the viewer to draw his own conclusions.

The film develops in two different structures.

The first, the dramatic-documentary structure, in which the contemporary protagonist of the film (2048), Yoju, watches documentary excerpts that his grandfather filmed during the 1960s in Israel (most of the documentary clips are from actual news footage that was filmed throughout 2008, Israel’s sixtieth year).

The second is a fictional documentary structure, in which Yoju interviews protagonists that experienced the collapse of the State of Israel and, with the perspective of hindsight, tell Yoju about his grandfather, as well as what happened during the years that disappeared into history.

Note that in Kaftori’s imagined future, the archive of the defunct state of Israel is now located in a Berlin library, presided over by an historian who speaks Yiddish in addition to his native Hebrew and adopted German. Also interesting is that Kaftori’s Israel is very Ashkenazi, with Yiddish mentioned as a Jewish language but Ladino ignored; and with the kibbutz, which is the ultimate Ashkenazi institution, held up as the ideal manifestation of the state. The Hebrew trailer also features an Arab character who, in the year 2048, lives in the land that was once Israel, where he owns a shop – Nasser’s Souvenirs – that deals in Israeli and Zionist memorabilia. The ultimate Jewish-Israeli nightmare has become reality: Israel has fallen into the hands of “the Arabs.”

*Click here to read a bit more about the film in English, and to purchase a DVD of 2048.

This post is cross-posted from +972 Magazine.

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8 Comments so far (Add 1 more)

  1. “Moralisers have a good conscience and is satisfied by his own self-righteousness. He is not a self-hater; he is enfolded in self-admiration. He is in step with the best opinion. He holds that the truth is to be arrived at by inverting the “us = good” and “other = bad” binarism. He finds virtue in opposing his own community. It is not enough for him to disagree, or even refute; he must expose the worst bad faith, the most ignoble motives, the grossest crimes.”
    The “Halo Effect” is a term generally defined as a cognitive bias whereby the perception of a person or group is influenced by the perception of another trait. Halo effects happen especially if the perceiver does not have enough information about all traits, so that he makes assumptions based on one or two prominent traits. This phenomenon has been used by Professor Gerald Steinberg to explain the tendency by many to blindly assume the benevolent intentions of NGOs – many of whom “appropriate [the moral] rhetoric of universal human rights to pursue highly particularistic, political and ideological goals, [and thus avoid] serious analysis and accountability.”

    1. Rogez
    on November 14th, 2010 at 1:40 am
  2. There is no democracy in Israel as a state is illegitimate and illegal and not recognized
    Evidence of this if anyone wanted to write a comment in the Israeli websites
    Does not allow him or be there are many obstacles to prevent him from writing a comment The reasons for Arab-Israeli conflict is the occupation of Palestine in 1948.
    Palestine Arab Islamic state like the rest of the Arab and Islamic states surrounding
    Them. Means that there are Jews and Zionists in Palestine a big mistake, because this entity
    Zionist is not consistent with the surrounding area (such as language, customs, traditions and religion)
    The only solution to end the Arab-Israeli conflict is the expulsion of Jews from Palestine
    All of Palestine. The Jewish people will not rest and will not feel comfortable and stability
    But if it gets out of Palestine and the Middle East completely. If people continue to
    Jews in Palestine and the Middle East, the death and destruction will continue.
    Palestine Arab Islamic state and will remain

    2. arab
    on November 14th, 2010 at 2:15 am
  3. arab@2 strikes me as the authentic voice of Palestine.

    “The reasons for Arab-Israeli conflict is the occupation of Palestine in 1948.”

    “The only solution to end the Arab-Israeli conflict is the expulsion of Jews from Palestine”.

    3. Rob
    on November 14th, 2010 at 12:08 pm
  4. They want the Jews gone, and the land back. They’ve been saying it for a hundred years.

    Why weren’t you listening, Lisa?

    I don’t want to lose my respect for you.

    I once thought you ran the best blog in the world.

    Say something.

    4. Rob
    on November 14th, 2010 at 12:29 pm
  5. You know Lisa, I am not so sure about Israel disappearing in the future. I don’t think the US will ever allow that to happen (although the ‘support’ the Americans are giving to Israel now is not very helpful i guess…). Plus, there are so many countries in the world with far more worse racist governments and where human rights are being violated constantly – but they still exist and they will not stop existing. My only worry is that Israel will one day become a state only for extreme right-wingers and intolerant religious people. The moderate majority could say ‘oh scew it’ and leave the country. There are already many Israelis with double passports, not for fun, but because the fear that Israel might change into something very, very ugly… Like Iran ;)

    P.S To ‘arab’: when I read ‘Islamic State’ I actually think: ‘Terrorist State where women are treated like dogs’.

    5. Ida
    on November 14th, 2010 at 1:44 pm
  6. Apologies for my last comment, Lisa. As can happen, it gave me an uneasy night.

    6. Rob
    on November 15th, 2010 at 7:57 am
  7. Rob – Don’t worry about idiots like commenter who calls himself ‘Arab.’ He’s just a shrill, fanatical voice in the wilderness. I published his comment in a moment of absent-mindedness and then decided to leave it – because people like ‘Arab’ exist – just as violent, racist extremists exist in Israel.

    Ida and Rob – This post is about a film that was made by an Israeli director. I did not write about it because it reflects my views; I wrote about it because it is an interesting story.

    7. Lisa Goldman
    on November 21st, 2010 at 6:07 pm
  8. wow! and the state let him make this movie in Israel? oh what a democratic state Israel is.

    9. Magued Hanna
    on December 1st, 2010 at 12:13 am

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