Adam Shurati, left, and Hadas Maor in the picture chosen for Suter's project
Een mooi project dat focust op de overeenkomsten tussen Joden en Palestijnen, en zo hopelijk bijdraagt aan het afbreken van vijandbeelden. Het roept herinneringen op aan het "Face to Face" project van enkele jaren geleden, waarin enorme foto's met lachende gezichten van Israeli's en Palestijnen op de afscheidingsmuur en elders werden geplakt.
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Last update - 19:23 30/05/2009
Can you tell the difference between an Israeli and a Palestinian?
By Dalia Karpel, Haaretz Correspondent
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1089016.html
Een mooi project dat focust op de overeenkomsten tussen Joden en Palestijnen, en zo hopelijk bijdraagt aan het afbreken van vijandbeelden. Het roept herinneringen op aan het "Face to Face" project van enkele jaren geleden, waarin enorme foto's met lachende gezichten van Israeli's en Palestijnen op de afscheidingsmuur en elders werden geplakt.
Wouter
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Last update - 19:23 30/05/2009
Can you tell the difference between an Israeli and a Palestinian?
By Dalia Karpel, Haaretz Correspondent
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1089016.html
The advertisement published in Haaretz in March read "Wanted: people who look alike," and promised NIS 8,000 to anyone that could locate someone who looked like one of the eight people featured in the advertisement.
What the advertisement didn't say, was that the eight people pictured were Palestinians.
The ad was made by Swiss artist Olivier Suter, as part of his project 'Enemies', which focused on the absurd ways people identify "the other".
The advertisement is similar to a project Suter performed in Belgium, which asked viewers if they could dfferentiate between Flemish and French speakers.
Out of the dozens of photos he received, Suter picked a photo of an Israeli girl and a Palestinian boy who looked alike. The girl is one Hadas Maor, whose photo was sent in by her father, geography professor Yehuda Keidar.
Keidar, a long-time supporter of a two-state solution said "[David] Ben-Gurion was right when he said 'The Palestinians are not our cousins, they're our brothers. Turns out, they could be twins."
The Palestinian boy is named Adam Shurati and he was none too pleased about his likeness to a girl, according to his mother Nancy. Adam was further dismayed when his mother took him to have his hair cut to look like Hadas'.
Nancy, who lives in Bet Hanina, called the project "amazing" and said that her son's resemblance to an Israel girl surprised her.
"The project is a work of art meant for all of us, not just for the sake of art," Suter said.
Suter's next "Enemies" project will take place in Rwanda and the Congo.
What the advertisement didn't say, was that the eight people pictured were Palestinians.
The ad was made by Swiss artist Olivier Suter, as part of his project 'Enemies', which focused on the absurd ways people identify "the other".
The advertisement is similar to a project Suter performed in Belgium, which asked viewers if they could dfferentiate between Flemish and French speakers.
Out of the dozens of photos he received, Suter picked a photo of an Israeli girl and a Palestinian boy who looked alike. The girl is one Hadas Maor, whose photo was sent in by her father, geography professor Yehuda Keidar.
Keidar, a long-time supporter of a two-state solution said "[David] Ben-Gurion was right when he said 'The Palestinians are not our cousins, they're our brothers. Turns out, they could be twins."
The Palestinian boy is named Adam Shurati and he was none too pleased about his likeness to a girl, according to his mother Nancy. Adam was further dismayed when his mother took him to have his hair cut to look like Hadas'.
Nancy, who lives in Bet Hanina, called the project "amazing" and said that her son's resemblance to an Israel girl surprised her.
"The project is a work of art meant for all of us, not just for the sake of art," Suter said.
Suter's next "Enemies" project will take place in Rwanda and the Congo.
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