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Film

Exposing hatred’s hidden face

When film-maker Naftaly Gliksberg went on a world tour to research antisemitism, he was shocked to find it lurking in everyday thoughts and conversations.

March 19, 2009 14:11
Naftaly Gliksberg (left) conducts an interview in his film, Look Into My Eyes, which investigates antisemitism in Europe and the United States

ByNick Johnstone, Nick Johnstone

2 min read

Back in 2005, Israeli documentary maker Naftaly Gliksberg, an avid consumer of European news, noted another year of disturbing antisemitic outrages in France. In those 12 months alone, 504 antisemitic incidents were reported. Gliksberg, who had been following news reports of antisemitic attacks in France since 2003, when he was profoundly affected by the savage murder of Jewish Parisian DJ Sebastien Selam by an Arab neighbour, felt not enough was being done to protect French Jews.

“As an Israeli,” says the 50-year-old filmmaker from his home in Tel Aviv, “antisemitism looks like a very strange story because when you grow up in Israel, you feel so safe. I had never met antisemitism.”

He decided to make a film exploring possible causes of anti-Jewish hatred, starting in Paris with an investigation into Selam’s murder. While there, he heard of countless antisemitic incidents, including the sickening story of a 12-year-old girl who was attacked by two men as she came out of a Jewish school in 2004 — they carved a swastika on her face with a box cutter.

As the stories piled up, he started thinking the problem was European-wide and set off for Poland, from where his family were driven during the Holocaust. With a cameraman in tow, he began shooting a rambling documentary, Michael Moore/ Nick Broomfield style. “My film is about underlying antisemitism,” he says of the finished work, Look Into My Eyes, which was eventually shot in France, Poland, Germany and the US.