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Arts & Culture

POV: Advocate

Meet Israeli lawyer Lea Tsemel (right), a political firebrand who is known by her opponents as "the devil's advocate" for her decades-long defense of Palestinians who have been accused of resisting the occupation, both violently and non-violently. (Undated photo)
Courtesy of Rachel Leah Jones and Philippe Bellaïche
Meet Israeli lawyer Lea Tsemel (right), a political firebrand who is known by her opponents as "the devil's advocate" for her decades-long defense of Palestinians who have been accused of resisting the occupation, both violently and non-violently. (Undated photo)

Airs Tuesday, July 28, 2020 at 11 p.m. on KPBS TV + Saturday, Aug. 1 at 9 a.m. on KPBS 2 + PBS Video App

Follow an Israeli lawyer who takes on two contentious court cases in a tireless quest for justice

A political firebrand in her home country, Israeli lawyer Lea Tsemel is known by political opponents as "the devil's advocate" for her decades-long defense of Palestinians who have been prosecuted for resisting the occupation, both violently and non-violently.

The thought-provoking, heart-wrenching documentary film “Advocate,” from filmmakers Rachel Leah Jones and Philippe Bellaïche, both captures Tsemel in cinema verité fashion fighting on behalf of her clients in Israel's challenging two-tier justice system and delves into Tsemel's personal and political history, by revisiting her landmark cases.

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From feminists and fundamentalists to peaceful demonstrators and armed militants, Lea Tsemel defends Palestinians in both military and civil courts. As a Jewish-Israeli lawyer who has represented political prisoners for nearly 50 years, Tsemel, in her tireless quest for justice, pushes the praxis of a human rights defender to its limits.

As far as most Israelis are concerned: she defends the indefensible. As far as Palestinians are concerned: she’s more than an attorney, she’s an advocate.

Called "a lively exercise in documentary advocacy" by POV Magazine, Advocate follows Tsemel’s caseload in real time, including the high-profile trial of a 13-year-old boy — her youngest client to date — accused of two attempted murders in a Jerusalem knife attack and the prosecution of a 31-year old woman for allegedly trying to commit a suicide bombing at a checkpoint.

Lea Tsemel (undated photo)
Courtesy of Rachel Leah Jones and Philippe Bellaïche
Lea Tsemel (undated photo)

Jones and Bellaïche invite the viewers to assume the privileged position of a fly on the wall in Tsemel’s hectic practice, where a year of documenting is like gathering a lifetime of evidence.

This evidence attests to the wrongs of occupation but also to the faults of those who try to resist it, the failings of those who try to defend them, and the fundamental flaws of a legal system that purports to serve justice but in fact serves the powers that be.

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“Advocate” artfully presents Tsemel’s critical, creative, coquettish and at times chaotic navigation of a discriminatory legal system.

Animated sequences conceal defendants' identities with a collage of indictments as Tsemel addresses their near impossible chances for acquittal, while interviews with Tsemel's family and friends reveal her unique ability to see the humanity of those accused. In her life, as in her work, she straddles an incredible divide.

Lea Tsemel (right) in animated sequence from "Advocate."
Courtesy of Rachel Leah Jones and Philippe Bellaïche
Lea Tsemel (right) in animated sequence from "Advocate."

On the one hand, she’s the boy calling the Emperor naked, i.e. naming the system’s intrinsic inequity: the occupier is judging (and jailing) the occupied.

On the other hand, she’s the boy with his finger in the dam, doing her utmost to uphold the rule-of-law before the flood of injustice drowns us all.

Lea Tsemel (undated photo)
Courtesy of Rachel Leah Jones and Philippe Bellaïche
Lea Tsemel (undated photo)

Filmmakers Rachel Leah Jones and Philippe Bellaïche said:

“We first met Lea many years ago. By then, the once anonymous firebrand law student who, following the 1967 war fearlessly distributed flyers on campus warning her fellow Israelis to end the occupation or risk a vicious cycle of violence, was already a household name. For us, socially and politically engaged filmmakers, her rebellious spirit and radical zeal were an inspiration. Lea spoke truth to power before the term became trendy and she’ll continue to do so after fear makes it fashionable. As such, she’s a model we’re hard-pressed to preserve, in Israel/Palestine and elsewhere. And yet Lea, who has spent a lifetime going against the grain of Israeli society, is as much a product of it as she is an exception to it. Through her, we tell another kind of Israeli history, without a capital H. Not the usual: ‘We came, we saw, we conquered, we shot, we cried.’ More like: ‘We cooked, we cleaned, we cursed, we tried to better the world, but didn’t always manage…’ At the end of the day, Advocate is a female-centered portrait of chutzpah put to good use: Lea is more often than not the only woman, or the only Jew, or the only leftist — in the room.”

Blending archival footage with moving testimonials, “Advocate” also surveys the milestones that shaped Lea’s career. Beginning in 1967, when she volunteered for the war naively hoping it would lead to coexistence and her subsequent “reality check” upon seeing Israeli soldiers expel Palestinians and destroy their homes, and ending decades later with a landmark victory for human rights, in which Lea helped to expose and outlaw inhumane interrogation methods.

The fact that the security services have failed to abide by that ruling in full does not keep Tsemel, who calls herself an “angry optimistic woman,” from trying. As one judge put it: “If Lea Tsemel didn’t exist, we’d have to invent her.”

Lea Tsemel in a scene from "Advocate."
Courtesy of Rachel Leah Jones and Philippe Bellaïche
Lea Tsemel in a scene from "Advocate."

Chris White, executive producer of POV said:

“‘Advocate’ shines a light on a character so steadfast in her conviction about systemic injustice in Israel-Palestine, that she is willing to assume a most unenviable role to affect change. For decades she has challenged the balance of power, questioning how the occupier can judge the occupied. This is a woman who stands for something and we are so proud to bring her story to American audiences on POV.”

Film Awards:

An original, provocative film that both exposes the human fallout of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and offers inspiration for a just and joint future, “Advocate” captured more than a dozen accolades at international film festivals, including "Best Israeli Film" at the DocAviv Film Festival, the Jury Prize at the Hong Kong International Film Festival, First Prize at the Moscow and UK Jewish film festivals, the Bridging the Borders Award at the Palm Springs International Film Festival, the Golden Horn at the Krakow Film Festival and the FIPRESCI Prize and Golden Alexander at the Thessaloniki Documentary Film Festival — among others.

“Advocate” had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival. Earlier this year, the film was shortlisted for the Oscars® for Best Documentary Feature and nominated for the Producers Guild Awards (PGA) for Outstanding Producer of Documentary Motion Pictures. It was also nominated for the IDA Documentary Awards for Best Director and Best Feature.

Watch On Your Schedule:

This film will stream online on POV.org in concurrence with its broadcast.

Watch with the PBS Video App or full episodes of POV are available to view online with the KPBS Video Player for a limited time after broadcast.

Join The Conversation:

POV is on Facebook, and you can follow @povdocs on Twitter.

"Advocate" is on Facebook.

Credits:

Directed by: Rachel Leah Jones, Philippe Bellaïche. Written by: Rachel Leah Jones. Cinematography: Philippe Bellaïche. Editing: Yaël Bitton. Sound: Rachel Leah Jones. Sound Editing: Riccardo Studer. Music: Robert Marcel Lepage. Production Design: Yoav Brill.