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About this project

Land of hope and dreams

In June 2002, the government of Israel decided to erect a physical barrier to separate Israel and the West Bank in an attempt to minimize the entry of Palestinian terrorists into the country. This has partially solved today's terrorist infiltration problem but has caused grief and pain to innocent Palestinians in every area in which it was constructed, along the 1967 Green Line.

Since 2009, I have been documenting the movement and livelihood of Palestinian people, on their way into Israel, via gaps and loopholes in the separation barrier, in the southern region of Mt. Hebron.
These Palestinians endure terrible conditions as illegal workers, sleeping rough in river creeks, under bridges, on building sites and under highways, trying to avoid getting caught.

The village of Ar Ramadin in the southern region of Mt Hebron presents a unique example of the kind of effect that the separation barrier has had. The village was established by the Bedouin tribe Ar Ramadin whose former lands, in areas north of Beer Sheva, they abandoned in the face of oncoming Israeli troops in the War of Independence in 1948. The lands the tribe left became part of the new Jewish state and the Ar Ramadin were forced to purchase land from Palestinian land owners in Dahariya, an Arab falachim village 12 kilometers to the north.

The Bedouins of Ar Ramadin are being perceived as Palestinians by the Jews and as Bedouin by the Palestinians. Both positions, for the Ar Ramadin represent an unfavorable choice. Clearly, the question of loyalties is a work in progress, undergoing formative influences. Loyalties made due to familiarity between the Ar Ramadinim and their Jewish neighbors have begun to crumble as a result of the physical barrier that lessens daily contact or that forces them into the role of unwanted intruders.

The 4 kilometer area of the fence just outside the village is notoriously easy to slip through. It seems that the Israeli government has not yet committed to completely closing down this area of fence in an attempt to accommodate for the very real necessity of relieving the pressure for employment that is building up on the other side. The sight of Bedouin workers escaping through the loopholes in the fence does not contribute to strengthening the Jews’ perception of them as innocent partners.

I am asking for your support to help tell this important story, as the Arab world is historically changing by the day and the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks are on hold once again….. One cannot predict what will happen next in this never ending conflict.
The lives of the Ar-Ramadin people, as well as many other lives in Israel, and the West Bank, will soon change forever.

Your support will help me produce an in-depth story (eventually a book) about these resilient people, and their way of life. The funds will cover travel logistics, car rental, fuel, housing, food and equipment costs.

Thank you for your interest and support.

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11
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$321
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Funding Unsuccessful

This project reached the deadline without achieving its funding goal on November 11, 2011.

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2 Backers

You'll receive exclusive updates on the project.

Estimated Delivery: Dec 2011

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4 Backers

Receive a personal thank you sent on a 4x6 print postcard plus exclusive updates on the project.

Estimated Delivery: Dec 2011

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3 Backers

Receive a Personal thank you sent on a 5x7 print postcard plus exclusive updates on the project.

Estimated Delivery: Dec 2011

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0 Backers

Receive a khamsa (palm-shaped amulet popular throughout the Middle East- A universal sign of protection), plus an 8x12 print and exclusive updates on the project.

Estimated Delivery: Dec 2011

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Receive a Misbaha ( string of prayer beads which is traditionally used by Ar- Ramadin tribe) Plus an 8x12 print and exclusive updates on the project.

Estimated Delivery: Dec 2011

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Receive an 12x18 print, plus all of the above.

Estimated Delivery: Dec 2011

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Your 12x18 print becomes a set of three images of your choosing from the project, plus all of the above.

Estimated Delivery: Dec 2011

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Your 12x18 print becomes a portfolio edition of five images of your choosing, a guided tour at the Joe Alon museum for the Bedouin culture (Israel), plus all of the above.

Estimated Delivery: Mar 2012

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0 Backers

A guided tour at the Ar Ramadin village, plus all of the above.

Estimated Delivery: Mar 2012

Project By

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Amnon Gutman and Kim Frumin

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Gutman has covered stories in places that the media world tends to ignore, places on the fringes of public awareness. In Africa his work in Uganda, Tanzania, Malawi and Mozambique documented the spread of AIDS and the on- going conflict in eastern DRC, focusing on the FDLR Hutu militia. Gutman was in China in the aftermath of the earthquake and shot the efforts made to come to terms with the vast destruction. His international interests took him to Sri Lanka where he documented the civil war there and to the southern island of Mindanao in the Philippines. There he did a project focusing on "the Ilaga" Christian vigilantes. Most recently Gutman completed a project about the effects of industrializations on local villagers in the state of Chhattisgarh, India.
He is presently busy documenting the ongoing movement across the West bank-Israeli border of Palestinians looking for work inside Israel.
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His work had been published by international magazines and newspapers, including Newsweek, NY Times, Wall Street Journal, The Guardian, The Observer, Le Monde, The Sunday Morning Herald, Boston Globe, Courrier Japan, Le Figaro and others. He participated in Courrier Japon’s “This Day of Change” special book project for January 2009.
His work was also exhibited and screened in photography festivals around the world- Italy, Australia, USA, Japan, and Israel.

  1. amnongutman.com
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