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Boston Jewish Film
2022 Summer Chinematheque

Boston Jewish Film's Summer Cinematheque kicks off this week!

Join us July 13 - August 10 for screenings of new Jewish films and old favorites. 

2022 SUMMER CINEMATHEQUE SCHEDULE
We are excited to welcome our community back into the theater tomorrow at West Newton Cinema for the SOLD OUT showing of Hallelujah!
Hallelujah: Loenard Cohen film image
SOLD OUT!
HALLELUJAH: LEONARD COHEN, A JOURNEY, A SONG
Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 7:00 PM
In-person sneak preview screening at West Newton Cinema
New England Premiere
Tickets will NOT be available at the door.
Boston Jewish Film is proud to present on June 20, 2022, the Massachusetts Premiere of Carol of the Bells. This harrowing story about the resilience and strength of three Ukrainian families is equally as timely with the conflict in Ukraine continuing to rage on. 
Wednesday, July 20, 2022 at 7:00 PM
In-person screening at West Newton Cinema
Massachusetts Premiere
 
Immortalized as one of the most scintillating and uplifting Christmas songs, Carol of the Bells, adapted from a popular and loved Ukrainian folk melody Shchedryk, has come to represent the spirit of brotherhood and unity worldwide. The song serves as a narrative path in this story of a peaceful and neighborly existence of three Polish, Ukrainian, and Jewish families, who share a large house, musical evenings, and merriment in the Ukrainian town of Stanislav. Their domestic harmony is shattered first by the Nazi invasion and then by the Soviet occupation of Ukraine. A moving story of courage, sacrifice, and love.
 
This screening features a special recorded intro by Ukrainian Writer/Director Olesya Morgunets-Isaenko, and an in-person introduction from Vladimir Foygelman, President of Center Makor.
Vladimir Foygelman, President of Center Makor and a native of Kiev, Ukraine, will speak about the Center’s Ukrainian relief efforts. Vladimir established Center Makor in 2005 and was the Principal of the Russian Jewish Community School. Vladimir is the founder of the Annual Artistic Hannukah Festival in Boston which is a successful event in the Russian speaking Jewish Community and is the oldest Russian Jewish Festival in North America.
This screening is sponsored by Center Makor, Boston.
To learn about Center Makor’s work and support Ukrainian relief efforts go to
centermakor.org
Special thanks to our community partner: Action for Post-Soviet Jewry.
Light refreshments and pastries will be served at this screening.
 
 
Cinema Sabaya film image
Screening online August 3-9, 2022
Available to watch for a 48-hour period from August 3 until 11:59 pm on August 9.
 
An audience favorite at the 2022 Boston Israeli Film Festival, Orit Fouks Rotem’s Cinema Sabaya is a work where fiction meets non-fiction. Her fascinating, deeply engaging hybrid film is about nine Israeli Arab and Jewish women from Hadera who participate in a video workshop led by a young Israeli female filmmaker. The women (played by a mix of seasoned and nonprofessional actors) learn to tell their stories in video, often filming their own footage and then responding in a real-time, documentary style to what they see. Through the emotional process of sharing and witnessing each other’s stories, where they examine their ambitions, identities, and convictions, from those of daily life to deeper moments of frustration and joy, the young women learn about each other and themselves. 
 
This screening features a special recorded introduction from Nahanni Rous, Host and Senior Producer of Can We Talk podcast of the Jewish Women’s Archive, and a pre-recorded conversation with Writer/Director Orit Fouks Rotem moderated by Nahanni Rous.
American Birthright film image
Screening online August 10-16, 2022
Available to watch for a 48-hour period from August 10 until 11:59 pm on August 16.
 
American Birthright is an entertaining and engrossing personal documentary that follows 29-year-old Israeli-American Becky Tahel Bordo’s struggle with the big questions about religion, love, and her Jewish identity after her younger sister Gal marries outside the faith. An Israeli immigrant in Los Angeles, Becky attempts to carve out her identity by consulting Rabbis, religious experts, mentors, and family members. Her initial question is always the same: "Should I marry Jewish?" But what she discovers changes that question to "What does it mean to be Jewish?" and shifts the course of her life. 
 
Featuring a special recorded conversation with Director and film subject Becky Tahel and Rabbi Doniel Katz, moderated by Boston Jewish Film's Artistic Director Lisa Gossels.
Donate while shopping & renting films! 
Simply start your shopping at smile.amazon.com/ch/04-3414850 to confirm "Boston Jewish Film Festival Inc" as your charity of choice, and AmazonSmile will donate a portion of your eligible purchase price to our organization.
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Steve Ross, Boston Jewish Film Festival 2017
Steve Ross, Boston Jewish Film Festival 2017
Steve Ross, Boston Jewish Film Festival 2017
Steve Ross, Boston Jewish Film Festival 2017
Steve Ross, Boston Jewish Film Festival 2017
Steve Ross, Boston Jewish Film Festival 2017
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