As we discovered in our third and final day of interviews with President Arias, the price he paid, was linked to the
environment, stunning scenery and natural beauty of Costa Rica. Capturing it on film also gave us a decent
break from the intensity of the interviews.
President Arafat’s wife was by no means the only one shedding tears across the first three films, and it wasn’t
just the interviewees. Every member of the crew bawled their eyes out at one point or another. The decisions
faced, choices made and unforeseen consequences were a revelation.
It wasn’t really until the third and final day of interviews with Oscar Arias that he really opened up. Everyone had
warned us that though he might come across as arrogant in fact he was just naturally shy - making the choice of a
career in politics extraordinary. In fact, one of his peers called him the anti-politician and by the end of our time
with him in Costa Rica we understood why.
Despite visiting some fairly dangerous locations, the West Bank town of Hebron easily outstripped them all in
terms of the feeling that at any point in time it could turn nasty. It was particularly heartbreaking to watch this
footage in the edit suite alongside the sound of former Israeli Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabin, thundering in
outrage - declaring he was determined the Hebron massacre would have zero impact on the peace process.
Within a year he’d be assassinated by right-wing Israeli extremist, Yigdal Amir and nearly two decades later the
peace process is in worse condition than it’s ever been under current Israeli Prime Minister, Netanyahu.
David Wilder is the media mouthpiece for the Jewish community in Hebron and distinctly adroit at side-stepping
anything that might be seen as controversial with genuine insight into the problems presented to Israeli leaders
by their own citizens. Then after his interview, one of the guys watching came over and said, “I’ve got something
to say that David wouldn’t”...If ever there was a contrast between a media mouthpiece’s carefully constructed
answers and the people he represents we got it in the can.
At one point Tirawi was one of Israel’s most wanted men. Arafat hid him in his offices (the Muqata) and chose
not to hand him over - resulting in a three year siege, Arafat’s death and General Tirawi’s unstinting loyalty. He
was cool, calm and collected until he started re-telling his last moments with Arafat - sitting on the floor crying and
hugging Arab-Israeli Member of the Knesset, Dr Ahmed Tibi.
Pretty much everywhere you pointed the camera, the view was stunning. You’d have to be a really good
cameraman to get a bad shot in Costa Rica.
It wasn’t long before two Range Rovers with blacked out windows showed up and unloaded a troop of armed
bodyguards with the owners of the quarry we were filming next to. This was right behind the infamous Kalandia
border crossing where thousands of Palestinians queue for hours on end to get through every day. Easy to see
how things can get out of hand when you’re living under occupation and an extraordinary situation for Arafat to
lead his people under.
Headed for General Tirawi’s Palestinian Security Forces training base in Jericho where we interviewed Tirawi as
well as getting some fantastic footage of his troops training. Tirawi, was at Arafat’s side when he first fell ill whilst
under siege in his Presidential headquarters, the Muqata.
Part of the conflict we found inside President Peres in Film 2 was based on current treatment of Arab-Israelis and
discrimination in the state he was instrumental in building. Having dedicated his life to building a state born of the
holocaust’s racism, he finds himself presiding over discrimination - so much so that he’d got to the point where he
said he could only be responsible for his own views and that if others chose to discriminate all he could do was
fight them.
The battle of El Karameh was a crucial turning point for Arafat’s leadership. Israel’s army under Moshe Dayan
had pretty much decimated the Arab forces in the six day war and were considered invincible. Arafat chose to
stand and fight in Karameh where the PFLP and other guerilla factions chose to run and live to fight another day.
Another of our interviewees, Bassam Abu Sharif (PFLP) was there when Arafat met with leaders from other
factions in the caves above Karameh, trying to persuade them to stand and fight. Arafat emerged from the battle
a hero, cementing his leadership.
Yasser Arafat said he’d rather cut off his right hand than accept Ahmed Qurei’s resignation. He was the lead
negotiator in the secret Oslo negotiations - ultimately the closest Israel and the Palestinians ever got to peace,
and resulting in Shimon Peres, Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat winning the Nobel Peace Prize.
Defying Ronald Reagan, despite Costa Rica having no army and being surrounded by warring Nicaragua, El
Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras was a difficult decision but proven to be the right one. When he shot this
look at the camera we got a glimpse of how tough the naturally shy Arias can be. No-one believed he could
bring peace to Central America, let alone get men like Nicaragua’s President Ortega to the negotiating table.
Munib had extraordinary revelations of Arafat as well as tales from his early years as a revolutionary leader.
Munib flew supplies for Arafat in his company planes, helped his escape from Jordan during Black September,
sent a yacht to rescue Arafat... the list goes on. We tried to get as much as we could into the film but could
easily have ended up with a 3 hour movie featuring only Munib - ultimately we had to settle for including much of
it in the DVD extras.
“What we call experience, the young generation call a chain of mistakes.” That was pretty much the first thing Peres said on camera. It felt like we got lucky and he was at a time and place in his life when he just wanted to offload. “OK, you really want to know how hard it is ? The price you pay ? I’ll tell you... but don’t blame me if you don’t like what you hear”... that kind of thing. By the end of our three meetings with Peres he’d gone full circle - there was some fairly unpleasant stuff in there, actually that’s a gross understatement - Peres pretty much faced the the worst possible circumstances and decisions a man can face, but by the time he’d revealed it all, on reflection, he figured the price he paid was worth it. What caught us totally by surprise was the price.