Controversy over Jewish-Israili actress playing Virgin Mary
ASPartOfMe
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Social media outrage after Israeli Jew cast as Jesus’ mother in Netflix biblical epic
Mary, directed by DJ Caruso, will star 21-year-old Noa Cohenin the starring role, alongside 22-year-old Israeli actor Ido Tako as Joseph, and is set to be released on December 6.
The release of the trailer on social media on Tuesday sparked a storm among users on X/Twitter, who immediately criticised the film for its casting of Cohen as the Virgin Mary, who some claim should be depicted by an actress of Palestinian descent.
The cast contains many other Israeli actors, including Ori Pfeffer, Mili Avital, Keren Tzur and Hilla Vidor, and features British film and theatre veteran Anthony Hopkins as King Herrod.
“Half the cast is Israeli, including Noa Cohen who plays Mary. Looks like s**t anyway, but needless to say avoid this like the plague,” tweeted one account, joining the call to boycott the film.
Antisemitic comments followed the trailer, with one account tweeting: “This is a joke and a slap in the face to all Christians. How dare you let that disgusting jew play Mary.”
Another account described the casting of Cohen in the titular role as blasphemous.
“There is something deeply blasphemous about casting an Israeli to play the role of Mary, the mother of Jesus, while Israel is carrying out a genocide against Palestinians, killing some of the oldest Christian populations in the area and destroying their heritage sites.”
Meanwhile, a different social media user took issue with the film because the titular roles would be played by “white Europeans”.
The director, Caruso, described his film to Entertainment Weekly as a “coming of age” story following a “smart, strong-willed young woman facing monumental challenges: overcoming social stigma, evading a jealous king and bearing the weight of a world-changing destiny”.
Explaining his decision to cast Israeli actors in the lead roles, he said it was “important to us that Mary, along with most of our primary cast, be selected from Israel to ensure authenticity”.
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Unfortunately, it appears that reasonable objections to the casting of this show have gotten mixed up with anti-Jewish bigotry (e.g. "that disgusting jew").
Here are my own thoughts. Given the director's stated desire to "ensure authenticity":
DNA tests have shown that most Jews and most Palestinians, especially Palestinian Christians, are very closely related. This is consistent with the known history of Palestine, that most Palestinian Christians are descended from ancient Jews who converted to Christianity. In other words, most Jews and most Palestinian Christians are of the same "race."
So, from a purely physical point of view, Palestinian Christians and Israeli Jews would be equally authentic representations of the Virgin Mary and her husband Joseph.
Culturally, though, I'm inclined to agree with the protesters that Palestinian Christians would be a better choice, not only for reasons of cultural heritage, but also because of the shared experience of living under occupation. Mary and Joseph lived under Roman occupation, and there are many aspects of their story, as told in the Gospels, that today's Palestinian Christians can relate to from personal experience.
Also the relevant ancient towns/cities, Bethlehem and Nazareth, are Palestinian cities today. Bethlehem today is a Palestinian enclave in the West Bank. Nazareth is in Israel, but many of its residents are Palestinian/Arab citizens of Israel. (Nazareth was one of the few places in Israel where the Palestinians were not expelled, apparently because the relevant Israeli commander decided that expelling a big bunch of Palestinian Christians out of Nazareth -- the town where Jesus grew up -- would risk getting too much bad press in the West.)
EDIT: Culturally, one could also make the contrary argument, that Mary and Joseph, as Jews, were religiously more similar to today's Jews than to Christians. However, although Mary and Joseph obviously weren't Christians, their religion wasn't modern Judaism either. The Talmud had not yet been put together, and Christianity inherited some aspects of Second Temple Era Judaism (e.g. the idea of Satan as the enemy of God, rather than just the heavenly prosecuting attorney) that were subsequently rejected by rabbinic Judaism.
Be that as it may, it is no surprise to me that Palestinian Christians would be outraged by the casting of Israeli Jews (i.e. first-class citizens of the nation currently oppressing Palestinians) as Mary and Joseph. Palestinian Christians see themselves as the direct descendants of the world's first Christians. They see Christianity as their own ancestors' gift to the world -- and they are quite disappointed, to say the least, by all too many Christians' ingratitude for this gift, and by all too many Christians' tendency to shower favors on Israeli Jews instead.
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Last edited by Mona Pereth on 15 Nov 2024, 1:43 am, edited 3 times in total.
Was their any similar controversy over Yvonne Elliman playing Mary Magdalen?
Probably not, but that was back in the 1970's, when authenticity of representation was not as common a concern as it is now.
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Kraichgauer
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The much greater tragedy, of course, is the current everyday, real-life treatment of the descendants of Jesus's original followers in the land where Jesus was born.
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Kraichgauer
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Location: Spokane area, Washington state.
The much greater tragedy, of course, is the current everyday, real-life treatment of the descendants of Jesus's original followers in the land where Jesus was born.
To be sure that is true. Both Palestinians and Jews can lay claim to being descendants of the Israelites, and for that reason extremists on both sides believe that justifies committing acts of violence against one another. Everyday people who only want to live in peace are caught in the middle.
For what it's worth, both the Germans and French can claim descent from the ancient Franks, and after centuries of murdering one another are finally peaceful neighbors. But maybe that's too much to hope for in the Middle East.
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