Queer Cinema for Palestine X Liberatory Visions (SOLD OUT)

Queer Cinema for Palestine X Liberatory Visions (SOLD OUT)
Queer, Palestine, Shorts Abgad Hawaz, Robin Riad, Tiyara Selen, Jannis Osterburg, Dima Hamdan, Jasmine Garden, 19:00 - 22:00 hrs € 5 / €5, €10 & €15,-

This June, Queer Cinema for Palestine (QCP) and Liberatory Visions are teaming up to bring the global film event No Pride in Genocide to Amsterdam. Now in its third edition, QCP unites grassroots, solidarity, and arts groups around the world for a month of collectively curated short films.

▫️19.00 Doors and Market
▪️19.30 Short film program
▫️21.00 Panel discussion on pinkwashing, with actionable tips for effective cultural boycotting and insights on how to create apartheid-free cultural spaces and events.
▪️21.30 Market, Drinks, Music

QCP began as a response to the Israeli state-sponsored TLVFest, offering an ethical platform for filmmakers who support the Palestinian call for the academic and cultural boycott of Israel, read more on PACBI’s website. Liberatory Visions is an Amsterdam-based event series exploring themes of freedom, resistance and liberation through independent film, talks and workshops.

Join us in Ventilator Cinema on 6th June to see this year’s expansive program of films by queer, Palestinian, and allied artists—across genres and geographies—showing the role of art in resistance and liberation.

In light of Israel’s ongoing genocide and ethnic cleansing across Gaza, the West Bank, and all of historic Palestine, we stand in solidarity with queer and trans Palestinians resisting pinkwashing and oppression.

All ticket profits go directly to the filmmakers, who have generously waived their screening fees.

Film Program

Abgad Hawaz, Robin Riad, 1min, Canada (2024)

Audio: Arabic, English
Subtitles: N/A

Robin Riad’s short hand-drawn analogue film ostensibly teaches the pronunciation of the Arabic Alphabet in 28 easy steps. In actuality, the hand-drawn letters were printed using a laser jet printer onto the optical soundtrack of 16mm film, and what you hear in the film is the projector reading the letters, and interpreting them into sound. Riad uses humour to play with and sit with her mother tongue, offering a ‘false’ lesson in pronunciation. A response to a digital form of anti-Arab hate that Riad witnessed online coming out of the genocide in Gaza, Abgad Hawaz is a way for her to hold close to her language, culture, and roots. (Written by Tara Hakim for TQFF)

Out of Gaza, Seza Tiyara Selen, Jannis Osterburg, 9min, Germany (2025)

Audio: German, Arabic
Subtitles: English

A young Palestinian woman wants to flee from Gaza with her friends, hoping to find freedom in the West. As a talented engineer she makes escape possible, but doubts arise if it is the right decision to leave. When they cross the wall, they encounter a world they did not expect.

Blood Like Water, Dima Hamdan, 14min, Palestine (2023)

Audio: Arabic
Subtitles: English

Shadi embarks on a secret adventure, and accidentally drags his family into a trap where they only have two choices; either collaborate with the Israeli occupation, or be shamed and humiliated by their own people. Based on true stories.

a tangled web drowning in honey, Tara Hakim & Hannah Hull, 9min, Canada (2023)

Audio: English
Subtitles: English

a tangled web drowning in honey is an experiential and textural short film that invites viewers into the inner workings of a mind to ponder the ways in which we love and unlove ourselves.

Aliens in Beirut, Raghed Charabaty, 16min, Lebanon, Canada (2025)

Audio: Arabic, English
Subtitles: English

Aliens in Beirut blurs doc and fiction, exploring alienation and desire at home through scripted improv, wildlife cinematography and visual experimentation. Charabaty (who also stars in the film) reimagines events from their life leading up to the fateful 2020 Beirut Port Explosion. Returning to Beirut from Toronto, desperately in search of roots, Amir falls for a stranger by the sea. In the end, the explosion cares for nobody – leaving behind traces of unerasable desire.

Palcorecore, Dana Dawud, 8min, Internet footage from Palestine (2023)

Audio: Arabic and English
Subtitles: English

Dana Dawud’s Palcorecore (Palestine) is a hypnotic fusion of dance, archival footage, and internet-circulated videos that collapse past and present into a visceral portrait of Palestinian life. Opening with The Lovers Songs Band and excerpts from Jenin, Jenin (2003), the film assembles fleeting yet powerful images: flag-waving horseback riders, families at the beach, teenagers dancing in flames, and acts of resistance against occupation. Dawud’s deadpan narration—“I witness you witness me, we are martyrs together”—pulls the viewer into a shared act of witnessing. Through rhythmic disorder and movement, the film captures the resilience, rebellion, and everyday joys of Palestinian existence, focusing particularly on youth and women in their defiant assertion of life.

I never promised you a Jasmine Garden, Teyama AlKamli, 20min, Canada (2023)

Audio: Arabic, English
Subtitles: English

Tara, a queer Palestinian woman in her late 20s, attempts to suppress her internal emotional turbulence during a phone call with her best friend Sarab, with whom she is in love.

Don’t take my joy away, Omar Gabriel, 7min, Lebanon (2024)

Audio: Arabic
Subtitles: English

Set in Shatila, a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon, two friends revel in the small joys of life until violence suddenly disrupts their world. Forced to flee, they embark on a dangerous journey of survival, confronting fear, chaos, and the stark realities around them. Along the way, they must choose between remaining in the shadows or seeking the light.

in 11 minutes
OT301
Overtoom 301, 1054 HW Amsterdam
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