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June 23, 2025

Film Review: Gaza: Journalists Under Fire

By John Hawkins

Here is a documentary that describes and sometimes shows the unprecedented murder of journalist in Gaza. They are targeted. What they are and would be covering is the erasure of a people.

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Journalist down in Gaza
Journalist down in Gaza
(Image by Brave New Films)
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ON November 19, 2023, Belal Jadallah, the founding director of Press House-Palestine, was killed by an Israeli airstrike as he tried to evacuate Gaza City. A decade of advocacy for independent Palestinian journalism ended in rubble. His death, featured in Robert Greenwald's unflinching documentary *Gaza: Journalists Under Fire*, encapsulates the moral and material stakes of press freedom under siege.

In Gaza, journalism has not just been censored-- it has been targeted, incinerated, and rendered lethal." Since October 7, 2023, more than 178 journalists have been killed in Gaza, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), marking the deadliest war for media workers in modern history -- surpassing the combined tolls of World War I, World War II, and the Vietnam War.

An important new film is available that documents the murderous rage Israeli forces have for those who would present a pro-Palestinian view and show the world the carnage wrought. That film, Gaza: Journalists Under Fire, Click Here released by Brave New Films and directed by Robert Greenwald, begins by showing the faces of several Palestinian media members killed, including Bilal Jadallah, a prominent Palestinian journalist and media figure; Heba Al-Abadla, who worked as a host for Al-Azhar radio: and, Sabrine Al-Abadla, a Palestinian woman from Rafah, Gaza -- a wife, mother of two, and the sister of slain journalist Heba Al-Abadla.

The film is fast-paced, graphic, violent, and full of dark energy. The handheld cameras bring realism, the interviews are testimonials to suffering and hopeless survival, and faces display trauma, hunger and thirst. From drone strikes to home demolitions, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) have systematically pursued a campaign to destroy not only the Palestinian population but those who document their suffering. Journalists were killed while sheltering in tents, sleeping beside their children, or fleeing in press-marked vehicles.

At the same time, Israeli surveillance technologies -- some of the most advanced on the planet -- saturate both Gaza and Israel, creating an omniscient system that paradoxically claims ignorance after every strike. This is the panopticon of a state that sees all but denies accountability.

Israel's assault on press freedom does not end at the Gaza border. The bombing of Al Jazeera's offices and the broader crackdown on pro-Palestinian voices globally-- including the arrest of students and journalists at Columbia University and other campuses-- reveal a coordinated effort to suppress dissent across borders. This transnational silencing extends to Israeli dissidents: Greenwald's film includes testimony from Jewish Israelis who refuse IDF enlistment, denouncing the genocide in their name.

To contextualize the broader assault, one must also account for the violence Palestinian journalists face from within. As detailed by Reporters Without Borders, Hamas and Fatah factions have threatened, beaten, and even kidnapped journalists whose reporting contradicted partisan lines. Public media controlled by the Palestinian Authority has become a site of factional warfare, while foreign reporters are used as political bargaining chips. Journalists in Gaza are caught in a double-bind of surveillance and sacrifice: to speak is to risk death; to remain silent is to abandon truth.

Greenwald's film serves not just as a documentary, but as a document -- a record for future tribunals and collective conscience. Its images of smoldering press vests, of families identifying remains, of children trying to explain who their parents were, are more than symbols. They are exhibits." To kill journalists is not just to silence a profession; it is to assault the very means by which we imagine justice.

Greenwald and BNF create free documentary films that inform the public, challenge corporate media, and motivate people to take action on social issues. Gaza: Journalists Under Fire Click Here is an important film to share with readers, activists in the Palestine Solidarity movement, and the labour movement at large. View the trailer Click Here. Register. Share the film. Spread the word.

To view, download and share this film go to bravenewfilms.org Click Here



Authors Website: https://tantricdispositionmatrix.substack.com/

Authors Bio:

John Kendall Hawkins is an American ex-pat freelance journalist and poet currently residing in Oceania.


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