Art for the Struggle, Struggle for the Art at Watershed
Tickets available via Watershed's Box Office.

A event held at Watershed on Saturday 6th December. The event starts at 14:00.


Tickets: https://www.watershed.co.uk/whatson/13627/art-for-the-struggle-struggle-for-the-art
Saturday 6th December 2025
14:00 - 16:20
Watershed

This screening will be followed by a talk by curator Saeed Taji Faroukhy.

Art for the Struggle, Struggle for the Art (archive shorts)
Dir. Areeb Zuaiter
⌚ 83 mins
£11.50 / £9.50 (£6 concession)

Art for the Struggle, Struggle for the Art is a collection of five short films from the revolutionary period of Palestinian cinema – from 1968 to 1974 – exploring the importance of archive film in social and cultural documentation. Curated by filmmaker and artist Saeed Taji Farouky, who will join us for a talk after the screening.

Far Away From Home (dir. Qais Al-Zubaidi, 1969, 11min)
A beautiful and moving experiment in which Al-Zubaidi invited the children he had just filmed in Al-Sabineh Palestinian refugee camp in Syria to narrate their own footage. The result is a disarming and reorienting experience that says as much about the construction of media perception as it does about the children themselves.

The Game (dir. Shirak, 1973, 16min)
A short fiction film—a rarity in the era of revolutionary cinema—that lays painfully bare the cycle of violence children are subjected to, and the inevitable consequences of that violence. The fatalism of The Game is a disturbing counter-point to the casual innocence of Qais Al-Zubaidi’s Far Away From Home, also part of this programme.

Cowboy (dir. Sami Al-Salamoni, 1973, 15min)
An experimental montage of archive and re-appropriated Hollywood footage that creates links between the treatment of Native Americans, the dispossession of the Palestinians, and the representations of these and other genocides in cinema history.

Quneitra 74 (dir. Mohammad Malas, 1974, 20min)
A peripatetic docu-fiction on displacement, reconstruction, and the fragility of memory this film returns with the inhabitants of Quneitra to their Golan Heights village after its destruction by the Israeli military. Refusing to linger on the ruins as mere aesthetics, director Mohammad Malas has his protagonist look directly into the eyes of the audience — a stark reminder of the world’s complicity.

Children Without Childhood (dir. Khadijeh Habashneh, 1972, 21min)
Co-produced by the General Union of Palestinian Women, this film from one of Palestinian cinema’s chief archivists reflects both the suffering and endurance of the orphans of Bayt Al-Sumud (The House of Steadfastness). Starkly exposing the gulf between international law and the reality of Palestine, Habashneh’s landmark work shows how Israel’s physical violence and cultural erasure have changed little in the more than 50 years since the film was made.

Part of Bristol Palestine Film Festival 2025.
See the full festival programme here: https://bristolpff.org.uk

DONATIONS:

All donations from this year’s festival will go to Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS), providing humanitarian assistance as well as health and social services to Palestinians whenever and wherever needed.
https://www.palestinercs.org/

Entry requirements: 18+, any under 18s accompanied by 21+ adult 1:1 ratio

Tickets for similar Bristol events.

Sea Change Light Festival at Rockaway Park
— Rockaway Park
exhibition family film festival circus
Afrika Eye Film Festival - Eyefull Shorts at The Cube
— The Cube
talks film festival
Narratives of Resistance film festival at Bristol Palestine Museum
— Bristol Palestine Museum
film
Tambor - Saturday and Sunday at The Trinity Centre
— The Trinity Centre
samba festival