Palestinian Aseel and Israeli Roy were childhood friends and fellow peace activists. After Aseel was killed by Israeli police, Roy has never stopped speaking to him, seeking his moral clarity during growing injustice. A deeply intimate testimony of solidarity amid the devastating war.

Roy Cohen, an Israeli of Arab-Jewish descent, and Palestinian citizen of Israel Aseel Asleh met in the 1990s as teenagers at a peace camp in Maine, USA. They became close friends and advocates for a shared future without violence – a hope that would never be realised. In the historic events of October 2000, Aseel was killed by Israeli police, leaving Roy with a wound that never healed. Since then, he has never stopped speaking to Aseel, seeking his moral clarity amid escalating injustice.

Far from Maine is Roy’s personal letter to Aseel, restoring his legacy through memories and encounters with Palestinian friends as well as leading Israeli figures in their community. The film stands as a testimony to Cohen’s grief, sense of responsibility and shattered sense of belonging amid the devastating war in Gaza and the extreme radicalisation of Israeli society after October 7. Through a deeply intimate gaze, Cohen captures this reality with honesty and clarity rooted in dialogue and deep nuance – qualities increasingly marginalised in an age defined by rupture and refusal.

 

 

Israele-Palestina: come vivranno l3 giovani di entrambe le parti del confine? Una grande storia di amicizia, un’analisi sul senso di responsabilità e sulla complessità di immaginare il futuro.

Il regista israeliano Roy Cohen, appena divenuto padre, ripercorre la sua adolescenza, trascorsa insieme all’amico palestinese Aseel, ucciso dalla polizia durante una manifestazione. Negli anni ’90, entrambi hanno fatto parte di una delegazione di giovani che ambivano a essere i semi di un futuro pacifico per il Medio Oriente. Oggi, Roy si interroga sul lutto e sul senso di responsabilità in una Tel Aviv sempre più radicalizzata.

 

 

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Palestinian Aseel and Israeli Roy were childhood friends and fellow peace activists. After Aseel was killed by Israeli police, Roy has never stopped speaking to him, seeking his moral clarity during growing injustice. A deeply intimate testimony of solidarity amid the devastating war.

Roy Cohen, an Israeli of Arab-Jewish descent, and Palestinian citizen of Israel Aseel Asleh met in the 1990s as teenagers at a peace camp in Maine, USA. They became close friends and advocates for a shared future without violence – a hope that would never be realised. In the historic events of October 2000, Aseel was killed by Israeli police, leaving Roy with a wound that never healed. Since then, he has never stopped speaking to Aseel, seeking his moral clarity amid escalating injustice.

Far from Maine is Roy’s personal letter to Aseel, restoring his legacy through memories and encounters with Palestinian friends as well as leading Israeli figures in their community. The film stands as a testimony to Cohen’s grief, sense of responsibility and shattered sense of belonging amid the devastating war in Gaza and the extreme radicalisation of Israeli society after October 7. Through a deeply intimate gaze, Cohen captures this reality with honesty and clarity rooted in dialogue and deep nuance – qualities increasingly marginalised in an age defined by rupture and refusal.

 

 

Israele-Palestina: come vivranno l3 giovani di entrambe le parti del confine? Una grande storia di amicizia, un’analisi sul senso di responsabilità e sulla complessità di immaginare il futuro.

Il regista israeliano Roy Cohen, appena divenuto padre, ripercorre la sua adolescenza, trascorsa insieme all’amico palestinese Aseel, ucciso dalla polizia durante una manifestazione. Negli anni ’90, entrambi hanno fatto parte di una delegazione di giovani che ambivano a essere i semi di un futuro pacifico per il Medio Oriente. Oggi, Roy si interroga sul lutto e sul senso di responsabilità in una Tel Aviv sempre più radicalizzata.

 

 

far_from Maine_poster