Hamas' depraved Pallywood performance

 

December 8, 2023



In the Academy Awards, no one has ever heard of an award recipient standing before a jubilant and envious audience, and say, “No, thank you, I really didn’t make this film and I do not deserve your recognition. I am rescinding this honor you have bestowed upon me.” Of course not. People who don’t win an Oscar, the most prestigious award in the Hollywood film industry, repeatedly claim that it’s just an honoree to be nominated. They’d never return the coveted award. It sounds absurd even to think it.

Unlike Miss Universe and other such beauty pageants where a second-place winner is selected in the event that Miss Universe is not able to complete her job, nobody has ever declined an Oscar, or returned one, for any reason. Not even after the 2022 brouhaha when Will Smith assaulted Chris Rock, and then received the Best Actor award. Even accused sex offenders Roman Polanski and Woody Allen have been feted by the Academy, despite allegations against them.

There were three people in all the Academy Awards history to decline to receive their Oscar, but these were more in protest of the commercialization of the Academy and a strike in Hollywood than because they did anything particularly righteous, or conversely, wrong.

Today, there’s an up-and-coming new Oscar competing for recognition in infamy. Let’s call it the Ahmed. It’s the competition for best performance in what’s commonly known as Pallywood: the fake film industry coming from Palestinian Arab terror groups and aspiring individual propogandists to portray a visually and graphically the most vile and vulgar aspects of their false narrative. The competition is fierce.

Pallywood productions are received, celebrated, and shared around the world today, and people are accepting it as if it’s video and historical gospel rather than the fake productions they are.

Recently, Pallywood was at its finest, starting with Hamas’ Islamic terrorists making videos from their own phones, GoPros, from the phones of their victims, and corroborated by CCTV and first responder videos, documenting the horrors of the massacre more than 1200 people, injuring thousands, and kidnapping of hundreds more, on October 7.

Shockingly, despite their own documentation of the slaughter that they inflicted, and that it was all done entirely premeditatedly to wild celebration of their “heroism,” much of the world is in denial that the massacres ever took place, or that if they did, the carnage was as bad as it was. They blame Israel for perpetrating “lies,” and accuse that Israel doctored these images which the terrorists filmed themselves as being “fake,” and even generated by AI. It is, classic and obscene, blaming the victim, and something surely not unique in Jewish history as there are no shortage of people who today deny the Holocaust even took place, or that 6 million Jews were slaughtered.

While millions in the world deny that the slaughter took place on Oct. 7, Hamas is using this, just as another way to inflict psychological terror. It’s as if they filmed it all representing the “best Pallywood cinematography,” but then denied doing it.

This vulgarity displayed itself again this week as Hamas has manipulated the reality of the kidnapping and holding hostage of 250 people. As videos have emerged of Israeli and other hostages being released from captivity, a careful observer will note that the hostages are accompanied by armed and masked terrorists.

It is depraved inhumanity. Hitler’s propogandist film maker Leni Riefenstahl would be proud. You see armed masked terrorists escorting their captives. You see the masked terrorists holding their captives’ hands as if loving parents walking them down the aisle. But for many of the captives, their parents, children, spouses, and other loved ones were massacred by the same Hamas terrorists.

You see the terrorists waving, and instructing their captives, “Keep waving.” The only thing not heard is someone shouting from off camera, “Cut!” or “Take thirty-four” when their captives didn’t get their part right.

You hear masked terrorists sending them off, “Bye, bye now.” And as they enter the waiting vehicles, “Welcome, welcome” alongside people who appear to be Red Cross staff, accomplices and supporting actors in the Hamas’ staged propaganda.

If the masked terrorists were humanitarians, why would they be masked? Why would they have captives in the first place? Why would they be instructing their captives to wave and smile for the camera? They want the world to believe that they are the humanitarian rescuers, but they are in fact the depraved inhuman captors.

It is Pallywood at its worst. The terrorists continue to inflict trauma on their captives and the world.

It is clear to anyone watching the charade about what was happening, but I never would have expected us to be so cruel and manipulative as to take the outtakes of all of this and splice it together as in one “best of Hamas terrorist kidnapping” film.

And the terribly sad and crazy thing in all of this is that there are people around the world who are watching these terrorist depictions and coming away with the impression that somehow Hamas is the humanitarian organization and element behind the release of the host. “Cool. Pass the popcorn.”

If Hamas didn’t brutally attack Israel and inhumanely massacre more than 1200 people, and take hundreds of hostages, there would never be a situation in which they would have to “return” hostages home. Until, and unless, they make the sequel: “The Jamaican Bobsled Team Did It.”

They are not humanitarians. They are Islamic terrorists. They use all media at their disposal to take credit for and celebrate their evil at one moment, then deny that they ever committed these crimes. And then take credit again, as if their humanitarian gesture for return of a fraction of the hostages that they took should be celebrated.

For the category of Best Supporting Act in a Film Disingenuously Made by Depraved Terrorists, the winner is: Hamas.

Jonathan Feldstein is president of the Genesis 123 Foundation and RunforZion.com, building bridges between Jews and Christians. He is the host of the “Inspiration from Zion” podcast, and editor of the forthcoming book “Israel the Miracle.” He and his family made moved to Israel in 2004. He can be reached at FirstPersonIsrael@gmail.com.

 

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