Mirren visits Jerusalem for new film Golda and says she is inspired by protests

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Mirren Visits Jerusalem For New Film Golda And Says She Is Inspired By Protests
Dame Helen Mirren, © PA Wire/PA Images
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By Julia Frankel, Associated Press

Dame Helen Mirren, who plays Israel’s first female prime minister in her latest film, said she has been inspired by the widespread protests against the country’s current prime minister.

The British actress, who portrays the late Golda Meir during the 1973 war between Israel and a coalition of Arab states in the film Golda, is visiting an Israel similarly beset by crisis as mass demonstrations take place against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s plan to overhaul the country’s judicial system.

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Dame Helen told a news conference before the opening of the Jerusalem Film Festival that she is inspired by the protests.


 

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“I’m personally very moved and excited when you see these huge demonstrations,” she said.

“I think it’s a pivotal moment in Israeli history.”

Mr Netanyahu’s coalition government, which took office in December, is the most hard-line ultranationalist and ultra-Orthodox in Israel’s 75-year history.

For more than six months, hundreds of thousands of people have taken to the streets to protest against the proposed judicial overhaul.

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Mr Netanyahu’s allies say the plan is needed to rein in the powers of an unelected judiciary.

His opponents say it is a thinly veiled power grab that will destroy the country’s fragile system of checks and balances.


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Dame Helen contrasted the leadership of Meir – who often served coffee to her military advisers as they convened in her kitchen to discuss strategy – with that of Mr Netanyahu, who has a reputation for being aloof and out of touch with everyday Israelis.

“She had immense power, but she was perfectly happy to toddle around in the kitchen, making everyone coffee and being the grandmother,” Dame Helen said.

“It’s a very different attitude toward power – from the male, Netanyahu type of power to the Golda Meir kitchen power.”

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Dame Helen’s visit also comes at a time when Mr Netanyahu’s government is moving to deepen its hold on the West Bank.

His government has approved plans for thousands of homes in West Bank settlements, and tensions with the Palestinians are rising.

More than 150 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire this year in the occupied West Bank, and Palestinian attacks targeting Israelis have killed at least 25 people.

Israel says most of the Palestinians who were killed were militants, though stone-throwers and people uninvolved in violence have also been among the dead.

Some of Mr Netanyahu’s allies are West Bank settler leaders who have sought to deny the national aspirations of Palestinians, a sentiment which Meir famously expressed in 1969.


Golda Meir
Golda Meir in the 1970s (PA)

“There was no such thing as Palestinians,” Meir said in an interview with The Sunday Times.

Israel’s far-right finance minister Bezalel Smotrich echoed Meir recently, saying “there is no such thing as a Palestinian people”.

Lior Ashkenazi, the Israeli actor who plays the head of the Israeli army in the film, said he thought Meir would support efforts to annex the West Bank.

“Even though she was a socialist,” Ashkenazi said, “I think she would definitely support the settlers.”

The film, directed by Guy Nattiv and written by Nicholas Martin, focuses on Meir’s leadership during the 1973 Mideast war, when a coalition of Arab states led by Egypt and Syria launched an attack on Israel on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar.

Under the leadership of Meir and Israeli military officials, Israel emerged victorious from the war, its forces standing within 70 miles of the Egyptian capital Cairo.

The war’s outcome laid the groundwork for a peace agreement between Israel and Egypt.

But Israel suffered heavy losses during the war, and Meir was criticised for the government’s lack of preparation and refusing to act on intelligence indicating an attack was imminent.

Meir resigned the following year, and the national trauma in the wake of the war set off a process that would bring the right-wing Likud party, which Mr Netanyahu currently leads, to power in 1977.

Dame Helen has won both Oscar and Emmy awards for performances ranging from Queen Elizabeth II in The Queen to Sofia Tolstoy in The Last Station.

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