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Posted: 2024-03-11T02:01:54Z | Updated: 2024-03-11T04:25:22Z

The Zone of Interest director Jonathan Glazer called out Israels bombardment of Gaza while accepting the Academy Award for Best International Film, one of the only award winners Sunday to directly acknowledge the war in Gaza onstage.

All our choices were made to reflect and confront us in the present, not to say: Look what they did then rather, look what we do now. Our film shows where dehumanization leads at its worst. Its shaped all of our past and present. Right now, we stand here as men who refute their Jewishness and the Holocaust being hijacked by an occupation which has led to conflict for so many innocent people, the British filmmaker said to applause. Whether the victims of October the 7th in Israel or the ongoing attack on Gaza all the victims of this dehumanization. How do we resist?

Throughout this years film awards season, the team behind the film has been virtually the only major award winner to explicitly mention Gaza on Hollywoods biggest stages , pointing out the present-day parallels to their film. Set during the Holocaust, the German-language film depicts the daily routines of a Nazi commandant and his family, living a life of comfort and privilege while overseeing the horrors of the Auschwitz concentration camp literally next door to their capacious home.

While winning the equivalent award at the BAFTA Awards last month, the films producer James Wilson similarly acknowledged the parallels to Gaza in his acceptance speech.

A friend wrote me after seeing the film the other day that he couldnt stop thinking about the walls we construct in our lives which we choose not to look behind, Wilson said in his acceptance speech for Best Film Not in the English Language. Those walls arent new, from before or during or since the Holocaust, and it seems stark right now that we should care about innocent people being killed in Gaza or Yemen, in the same way we think about innocent people being killed in Mariupol [in Ukraine] or in Israel or anywhere else in the world. And thank you for recognizing a film that asks us to think in those spaces.