Shock in Jenin after theatre director's murder | Inquirer Entertainment

Shock in Jenin after theatre director’s murder

/ 05:00 AM April 06, 2011

JENIN—The murder of an Israeli-Palestinian theatre director drew international condemnation on Tuesday, as shocked colleagues refused to believe he was killed for his art.

Juliano Mer-Khamis, a well-known actor and theatre director born of Jewish and Arab parents, died on Monday in the Jenin refugee camp when a gunman opened fire on his car as he was driving home with his infant son and the baby-sitter.

The murder of the 52-year-old director of The Freedom Theatre sparked grief and outrage among both Israelis and Palestinians, and no small measure of shock in this camp in the northern West Bank, where he had lived for the last seven years.

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The international community condemned the killing, saying he was an example of coexistence.

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“He was a unique and talented actor and director and a symbol of coexistence and peace,” said Richard Miron, spokesman for UN Middle East envoy Robert Serry. “The UN’s thoughts are with his family and all who he touched through his life.”

France called the killing an “odious and cowardly act.”

“More than ever the message of Juliano Mer-Khamis and of all those who campaign for the reconciliation of these two peoples needs to be heard,” said foreign ministry spokesman Bernard Valero.

In the camp itself, shocked colleagues refused to believe Mer-Khamis had been murdered because of his work.

“I cannot believe it; it’s like a nightmare,” said Samia Steti, director of programmes at the theatre, who told AFP she had been speaking to Mer-Khamis just minutes before he was murdered.

“We met at 3:30 for about 15 minutes to prepare for a meeting about ‘Alice in Wonderland’ but then he left to take his baby son home with the baby-sitter,” she said.

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“About two minutes later we heard shooting and everybody started joking that they had killed him,” Steti told AFP, saying Mer-Khamis himself had always made a point of joking around that one day he would die in the camp.

Then they went outside and realised what had happened.

Police and medics said the shooter had fired five bullets at Mer-Khamis, one of which hit the arm of the baby-sitter who was also in the car.

His 10-month-old son, who was sitting on his lap at the time, was unharmed, friends and co-workers said.

Overnight, police in the camp arrested four suspects, one of whom belongs to the Islamist Hamas movement, security sources said. They were also interviewing the baby-sitter, who said she had seen the shooter’s face, Steti said.

In the alley way leading to the theatre, dozens of pictures of the murdered thespian lined the walls among swathes of black cloth in a sign of mourning, an AFP correspondent said.

Inside, everyone was wearing black, and many had eyes red from weeping.

Zakaria Zubeidi, a former top militant who was close to Mar-Khamis and a supporter of the theatre, told reporters he believed the shooting was a professional ‘hit.’

“The people behind this murder either belong to a powerful organization or a state,” he told reporters. “This cannot be the work of people who were angry with Juliano or with the theatre.”

And Khaled Abu al-Hijah, a theatre board member who was also close to the family, told AFP Mar-Khamis had felt safe living in the camp.

“Jule was a resident of the camp. He lived here with his wife and children, who were always hanging around at the theatre,” he said.

“If you’re afraid, you don’t bring your children here.”

Mer-Khamis, who was born and grew up in the northern Arab Israeli city of Nazareth, never referred to himself as an Arab Israeli, Hijah said.

“He used to say: ‘I am both Palestinian and Jewish. I cannot divide myself between my mother and my father.'”

After the shooting, his body was taken to Israel for a post-mortem.

Israeli media said Mer-Khamis’s body was lying in state at a theatre in the northern port city of Haifa and would be buried on Wednesday in Kibbutz Ramot Menashe.

His funeral procession would go via the Jalame crossing near Jenin so that residents could pay their last respects, public radio said.

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Friends and co-workers said a symbolic funeral was also likely to be held in the camp.

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