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Review: The Siege
Richard Lutz reviews a play that emerges from the refugee camps of the West Bank.
This is a play about politics, and it can be difficult separating its hardline take on the thorny MiddleEast problems or whether it's simply a good play, a thoughtful play, whatever your stance on theIsraeli-Arab conflict.
Freedom Theatre emerged from the refugee camps and it is no surprise that it takes a deeply anti-Israeli narrative. But a telling and moving one too.
The plot twists around a real event 13 years ago when armed Palestinian fighters holed up in thesacred Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem. Hemmed in by soldiers, hungry, sniped at bysharpshooters, the men lasted 39 days along with 200 priests, nuns and churchgoers caught up inthe bloody confrontation. Finally the fighters received safe passage and the siege ended.
Inevitably, the story, produced at The Birmingham Rep'sDoor Studio is about the inner conflict among the men.There is the idealist, the romantic, the wounded warrior,the rationalist, even the one who thinks of little but eatinga good meal washed down by a Sprite. If that can soundstereotypical and trite, it must be noted that the men'sprofiles are based on real people and the ensuinginterviews with them in their exile.
But it is partisan polemic. Little is said about the Christianmen and women under siege, much less what Israel maythink of it all, but with the aid of tightly edited videospecial effects it does re-create what must have been aclaustrophobic and terrifying episode in the besieged'slives.
The play is fuelled by understandable anger, wellexpressed; The Siege leaves you with a taste about what races through a Palestinian's heart whenfaced with overwhelming odds and their take on history.
Until Sat 6th June. Tickets: 0121 236 4455
http://thebirminghampress.com/2015/06/review-the-siege/