The Road to Jenin
The Road to Jenin is a 2003 documentary directed by Pierre Rehov,[1] a French-Algerian film director of Jewish descent, whose documentaries mostly deal with the Middle East conflict. The Road to Jenin was produced to counter the Palestinian narrative in relation to the Battle of Jenin, a clash between the Israeli army and Palestinian militants in April 2002 which drew Palestinian accounts of a "Jenin Massacre" (Arabic: مجزرة جنين). This film was also a response to Mohammed Bakri's film entitled Jenin, Jenin. ContentRehov's film begins some time before Israel's Operation Defensive Shield in Jenin with the Passover Seder bombing in Netanya, referred to in Israel as the Passover massacre, in which some 30 Israeli civilians were killed and 140 injured by a terrorist bomb.[2] Operation Defensive Shield was launched in April 2002 response to this March 27 bombing, as well as two previous attacks that killed 18. Israel Channel One, which showed the film on its program Prime Time, said of it:[3]
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