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Health & Fitness

Review of "The Gatekeepers" – A Documentary

Having written several novels involving the Israeli secret services, I found “The Gatekeepers” irresistibly interesting as it contains interviews with key Israeli spy figures. However, while this movie purports to be a documentary, its clever editing, designed to support its heavy-handed political theme, makes it less faithful to historic facts than many novels.

The Gatekeepers is a documentary consisting mostly of short clips from long interviews with six former chiefs of the Israeli domestic security agency (“Shin Bet”) (the equivalent to the FBI in the United States). In between, there are short snippets of video footage, mixing real historic material with dramatized clips of unexplained origin.

In its essence, The Gatekeepers is a well-done yet lengthy political ad for the position that Israel’s “occupation” of the West Bank and Gaza is the reason for lack of peace in the Middle East. Many of the interview clips seem to have been cut by the movie editor and taken out of context in order to support this central political theme.

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The weakness in this “blame it on the occupation” concept, obviously, is its contradiction of historic facts: The Arab war on the Jews in Palestine started a century ago, long before Israel was even established (in 1948), which was two decades before Israel captured the West Bank and Gaza (in 1967). (My novel, The Jerusalem Inception, chronicles the dramatic events leading to that war, known as the Six Days War.)

Current events don’t help this theory either: Israel has long ago handed over Gaza and most of the West Bank to the Palestinians, who not only have continued to fight Israel, but have since commenced a lengthy war with each other, pitting Hamas against Fatah in a sad mirror of the wider, tragic conflicts between secularists and Islamists, as well as Sunni and Shia believers.

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Furthermore, the constant state of war in the greater Middle East, currently flaring up in Libya, Sudan, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Egypt, also proves the irrelevance of this minor “occupation” to the greater Mideast perpetual state of war.

An excellent review of this movie, which addresses these issues, appears in The Jerusalem Post at:

http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-Ed-Contributors/The-dishonesty-of-The-Gatekeepers

That said, The Gatekeepers is truly impressive in having drawn these six powerful, clandestine men out of their stealthy dens and making them speak on camera with such passion, reflection and sincerity. Notwithstanding the caveats mentioned above, The Gatekeeper is well-worth watching– not as a factual documentary, but as a thought provoking and brave peek into a secret and morally complex world of covert warriors who rarely speak in public. (Avraham Azrieli is the author of The Masada Complex, among other novels.)

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