Palestine will win

In 1977, as part of Afternoon for Change (run by a group of student activists) at the University of Queensland student union, the Education Resource office showed a film called Palestine will win. I found the film in a catalogue of the Sydney filmmakers co-op, and it was the only Palestinian film that was available in that collection of hundreds of films. – Ian Curr, former Education Resource Officer at University of Qld Student’s Union

The 1977-79 Democratic Rights campaign at Queensland University organised ‘Afternoon for Change’ each Wednesday at the Student Union complex where we showed revolutionary and progressive films, had discussions and printed leaflets. This was run out of the education resource office and later, the Civil Liberties room. During 1976 to 78. We organised regular forums and put on a public trial of Bjelke-Petersen which attracted a large crowd between Schonell Theatre and the refectory at the back of the main building.

Palestine willl win” …  “Palestine Vaincra”  was a 1969 film by Jean-Pierre OLIVIER de SARDAN about the 1968 Battle of Karameh.  Now, 50 years later, in the middle of Israel’s genocide of the Palestinians, a BDS Solidarity group at the University of Queensland is looking for films about the setback from six-day-war, al Naksa.

Al Naksa Day (Arabic: يوم النكسة, Yawm an-Naksa, meaning “day of the setback”) is the annual day of commemoration for the Palestinian people  driven out of their homes during the Six-Day War on 5 June 1967.  The 58th anniversary of al Naksa is coming up in a few days time.

Sydney filmmakers co-op catalogue used by Education Resource Office to find films for Afternoon for Change at University of Queensland Union.

Now nearly 50 Years later the film has been rediscovered.

Here is the description from the third world network.

Long-Lost French Film “Palestine Vaincra” Set to Premiere in New York and London

Third World Newsreel Announces 2K Digital Preservation and Release of Jean-Pierre Olivier De Sardan’s Lost Documentary Film “Palestine Vaincra”Film Archivist Draye Wilson Found “Palestine Vaincra” in the Third World Newsreel Archives (New York, NY) Third World Newsreel is proud to announce the 2K digital preservation of the long-lost French documentary Palestine Vaincra (Palestine Will Win) by Jean-Pierre Oliver De Sardan.

This short film is considered the first French film made in solidarity with the Palestinian people. Palestine Vaincra will open NYC’s Prismatic Ground Film Festival on April 30th at the Anthology Film Archives and will also be featured at London’s Open City Documentary Festival on May 8th.

The film was rediscovered by audiovisual archivist Draye Wilson at the Third World Newsreel Archives while working on a special project to digitally preserve dozens of films made by the Newsreel Collective from 1968 to 1972. During this process, Wilson came across a film canister labeled Palestine Vaincra.

Wilson says, “This was in late 2023, and the ongoing destruction of Gaza was just about the only thing on our minds at the TWN offices. I had never heard of this film before, and it didn’t seem to be part of TWN’s catalog. I was fortunate to find a single reference to the film online. Palestine Vaincra had been considered a lost film for decades and had not been seen by the film director Jean-Pierre Oliver De Sardan since 1972.”

With some searching, Wilson was able to find film director Jean-Pierre Oliver De Sardan, who was overjoyed at the news that his film had been rediscovered. “The original French version of the film was shot in 1969 in a student dorm, with the invaluable help of a few comrades whose names I’ve unfortunately forgotten,” said Oliver De Sardan, “For the editing room and laboratory, I was helped by the ‘Etats généraux du cinéma,’ a group of militant filmmakers formed in Paris in May 1968. The final war scenes filmed in Vietnam were supplied to me by Joris Ivens and Marcelin Loridan.”

The film was used in the early 1970s by European committees that supported the Palestinian struggle. According to the filmmaker, the film prints gradually disappeared, leaving no trace of the film for decades, until the English version was found in New York.

JT Takagi, Executive Director, said “It was a stunning surprise to find this film, which our generation of Third World Newsreel folks didn’t realize existed. It’s an amazing historical document which we hope will add to the knowledge and understanding needed at this time.”

“Palestine Vaincra” centers on the 1968 Battle of Karameh while also tracing the complex history of five decades of Palestinian resistance for liberation. The film blends historical testimonies by Palestinians, photographs, stock footage, maps, and music. Still relevant, the film has been digitally preserved and is once again available for public screenings from Third World Newsreel.

***

Jean-Pierre OLIVIER de SARDAN works in Niger (he has Nigerian and French citizenships), and is among the founders of LASDEL, Laboratory for Study and Research on Social Dynamics and Local Development, in Niamey (www.lasdel.net). He is also Professor of Anthropology at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales and Emeritus director of research at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (France).

Draye Wilson is an audiovisual archivist based in New York City. Currently, Draye is working with Electronic Arts Intermix, Meredith Monk’s House Foundation for the Arts, and Third World Newsreel. Previously, Draye has worked with organizations such as Blank Forms, the Brooklyn Museum, and the Wisconsin Center for Film and Theatre Research. Draye is particularly interested in working with underground material, as well as experimental cinema and music.

Since 1968, Third World Newsreel (TWN) has advanced movement storytelling and media arts for cultural and social justice. Visit www.twn.org.

Release date: 4/22/2025
Contact: (212) 947-9277 x10
twn@twn.org

One thought on “Palestine will win

  1. Q. Did you see the Palestinian flags as the Giro came into Vittorio Veneto?

    Ans: I stayed up till the early hours (I’m im a different time zone). I’ve watched Stages 13 and 16 of the Giro. I witnessed Danish Mads Pedersen fight it out with Belgian Wout Van Aert only to see people frantically waving Palestinian flags. Wasn’t it great!

    Free, Free Palestine!

    Final sprint, Mads Pedersen in purple. Wout van Aert in yellow.

    Mads wins with Palestinian flags in the background!

    Palestinian flag hanging from the balcony on the route of the Giro d’Italia.

    I don’t know how effective these protests are but they are certainly being conducted worldwide while Israel is bombing Gaza to smithereens, burning children, schools and tents.

    Giro d’Italia protest against genocide stage 16, 28 May 2025

    Giro d’Italia protest against genocide stage 16, 28 May 2025

    Mads wins with Palestinian flags in the background!

    Final sprint, Mads Pedersen in purple. Wout van Aert in yellow.

    Israeli Premier Tech rider, Derek Gee, crosses the finish line in the shadow of a Palestinian flag stage 16 Giro d’Italia

    Ian Curr
    17 May 2025

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