Why Are People in Both Lebanon and Israel So Upset With the Hit Show ‘Homeland’?
​Reminder: Stories that include “(AP)” ​at the beginning are authored by the Associated Press and posted by a Blaze writer. If edits are made, the designation “(TheBlaze/AP)” appears.
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This undated image released by Showtime shows actors Claire Danes as Carrie Mathison, right, and Mandy Patinkin as Saul Berenson in a scene from the second season of “Homeland,” filmed in Israel. The scene from a recent episode of the hit series “Homeland,” is supposed to be Beirut – but it was shot in Tel Aviv, Israel. And that has some people irritated in both cities. Credit: AP
BEIRUT (AP) — Militants carrying assault weapons clear the area around a street, shouting in Arabic for people to get out of the way. A jeep pulls up: The world’s No. 1 jihadi has arrived for a meeting with top Hezbollah commanders. On rooftops, U.S. snipers crouch unseen, the kingpin in their crosshairs at last.
The scene, from a recent episode of the hit U.S. Showtime series “Homeland,” is supposed to be Beirut. But it is really in Israel, a country similar enough in some areas to stand in for Lebanon, yet a world away in most other respects.
The show about Arab terrorists and American turncoats has inadvertently become a tale of two cities. Some Beirutis are angry because the depiction of their city as swarming with militiamen is misleading and because they see Israel as the enemy. And in Israel, some are peeved that Haifa and even Tel Aviv – a self-styled nightlife capital and high-tech hub – apparently appear, to outsiders at least, to be Middle Eastern after all.
Lebanese Tourism Minister Fadi Abboud told The Associated Press on Thursday that he’s so upset about the portrayal of Beirut that he’s considering a lawsuit.
“The information minister is studying media laws to see what can be done,” he said.
Abboud pointed to the scene with the snipers. Hamra Street in West Beirut is portrayed as a hotbed of violence, but it is actually a lively neighborhood packed with cafes, book shops and pubs.
“It showed Hamra Street with militia roaming in it. This does not reflect reality,” he said. “It was not filmed in Beirut and does not portray the real image of Beirut.”
Twentieth Century Fox Television refused to comment.
Several Lebanese interviewed by the AP said they have never heard of the show. When a reporter described the plot and said it was shot in Israel, the reactions ranged from anger to blithe acceptance that filmmaking is an imperfect art.
Hamed Moussa, an engineering student at the American University of Beirut, said it’s not a problem that Israelis are portraying Lebanese. In fact, he said, Lebanese often play Israeli characters in Lebanese soap operas.
But Ghada Jaber, a 60-year-old housewife, said Israel should never stand in for Lebanon.
“It is very insulting,” she said as she walked along Hamra Street. “Israel destroyed our country. Israel invaded and occupied our country.”
“Homeland,” based on the Israeli series “Prisoners of War,” is about a U.S Marine named Nick Brody who was a POW for years in the Middle East. The federal government and the public see Brody as a war hero, but a CIA operative played by Claire Danes believes he was turned by the enemy and is now a threat to the U.S.
The second season began last month, and some of the urban scenes are shot in Tel Aviv, the Israeli metropolis about 250 kilometers (150 miles) south of Beirut. Jaffa, a popular mixed Jewish and Arab neighborhood of Tel Aviv, was an Arab town before Israel gained independence in 1948, and its Levantine architecture, mosques and minarets, situated along the Mediterranean, allowed the creators of “Homeland” to present a plausible version of Beirut.
To the average viewer, the Beirut scenes may appear authentic. But to the discerning viewer, hints of Israel are everywhere: cars with blurred yellow Israeli license plates, red-and-white curbs that designate no-parking zones, an Israeli-style traffic circle, and a well-known minaret and clock tower in Jaffa.
In one rooftop scene, parts of the Tel Aviv skyline, with hotels lining the Mediterranean and the iconic “Shalom Tower” skyscraper, can be seen in the distance.
In one publicity shot released by Showtime from the recent “Back to Beirut” episode, Danes’ character is walking through a Beirut open market and passes a stall selling two Israeli T-shirts: one red with the white Coca-Cola logo in large Hebrew letters, the other a yellow jersey of a Jerusalem soccer team with the name in Hebrew, Beitar Yerushalayim, and a menorah. In a fast-paced chase that actually aired, however, there were no traces of Israel.
The reactions to the show in Lebanon and Israel reflect the tremendous divergence of narratives between the two peoples – each seeing the other as aggressor, each seeing itself as a victim.
Many Lebanese cannot forget the massive destruction Israel inflicted on Beirut during a 1982 invasion when it succeeded in routing the Palestine Liberation Organization from the country. They resent the 18-year occupation of south Lebanon that followed, and their leaders in any case reject the existence of the Jewish state.
But to Israel, Lebanon has been a perennial staging ground for missile strikes and other attacks on Israel, more than justifying the massive Israeli operations there that have occurred in every decade since the 1970s.
Eytan Schwartz, a spokesman for Tel Aviv’s mayor, said the Lebanese should, if anything, be pleased at the TV show’s choice for a stand-in.
“If I were Lebanese, with all due respect, I’d be very flattered that a city, and a world heritage site, thanks to its incredible architecture, and residents who were named among the top 10 most beautiful people in the world (ranked by Traveler’s Digest magazine in 2012) could pass as Lebanese,” he said.
“All we can do is pray for a day when the Lebanese regime will allow our Lebanese friends to visit us and see for themselves,” Schwartz said.
Nir Rubinstein, an Israeli Internet developer who fought in Beirut as a young soldier 30 years ago, said he understood the Lebanese anger, but also how Israelis might be insulted as well.
“This sort of diminishes Tel Aviv and Jaffa, which are more modern than Beirut,” said Rubinstein, speaking for a generation of Tel Aviv residents who are aggressively proud of their city – a densely populated urban area of some 2.5 million people with a standard of living that rivals most places in Europe, a world-class tech industry and a raucous nightlife.
Beirut itself has developed impressively in the two decades since its 15-year civil war ended, and its growing renown as a party city in its own right – the most liberal and fun-loving of major Arab cities – is a source of some fascination to Israelis who are barred from going there.
But the portrayal of Lebanon as swarming with guns is hardly unreasonable nonetheless.
The country has dozens of armed militias that still flourish, and an alarming number of private individuals have weapons in their homes, including hunting rifles, guns and even RPG launchers.
The biggest militia of all, Iranian-backed Hezbollah, has gained so much power and influence over the years that it’s now part of the government, wielding virtual veto power, and long-running talks on disarmament have gone nowhere.
The abundance of weapons is one reason why conflicts here can turn deadly so quickly.
In May, an explosive, eight-hour shootout in a residential area of west Beirut, which apparently began after a domestic dispute, killed several people – including a man who was firing machine guns and lobbing grenades from his balcony.
Lebanon also has seen a rise in clashes stemming from the civil war in neighboring Syria.
Despite its immense popularity, “Homeland” does not appear to have reached Hezbollah’s radar.
“I have no idea what you are talking about,” Hezbollah spokesman Ibrahim al-Moussawi told the AP when asked about the show. “This is the first I’m hearing about it.”
Still, he described Abboud’s plan to sue the producers as “a good step” and said Hezbollah will probably study the issue and put out a statement if needed.
Lebanon’s leading LBC TV carried a report on the controversy Thursday, saying the show disparages Arabs and that its setting in Israel is “a double insult.”
But Ariel Kolitz, a Tel Aviv businessman who was a childhood friend of Gideon Raff, the Israeli co-creator of “Homeland,” said that it wasn’t as if the production team had the option of shooting in Beirut, where Raff and other Israelis involved are not permitted to visit and where they could be in danger.
“It’s a lot simpler to shoot here,” he said. “That’s it.”
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AP writer Lauren E. Bohn in Tel Aviv contributed to this report.
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betterthantv
Posted on October 20, 2012 at 1:47pmThe day after Lebanon expressed their “outrage” a car bomb exploded killing 8 people, in Beirut! Oh the irony!
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coasttoast
Posted on October 20, 2012 at 9:27amGreat show!
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winston.smith_84
Posted on October 20, 2012 at 5:24amArabs get upset at the most inconsequential things…must be all the sand in the shorts!
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Kneale
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 2:08pmWho wants to be posted to Lebanon now. You know how movies can upset the *******.
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BasketFullOfPuppies
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 12:36pmIt’s a tv show. It’s not based in reality. Don’t like it? Don’t watch. Don’t want them to film there? Don’t let them. But, don’t get mad after the fact. And, don’t threaten to sue or something like that. Just don’t let them film there, next time. Now, move along. You have much bigger worries in the world.
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FesteAinoriba
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 1:32pmIt is refreshing to see at least one show on tv whose antagonists are radical islamisists. Since 2001, I’ve been singularly frustrated by hollywood’s cowardly treatment of terrorists – usually selecting caucasian males as the terrorists. My sense has been that hollywood has gone out of their way to avoid depicting reality – and instead to fecklessly try to portray white males and european culture as the real enemy of civilization. In this regard, even Homeland’s main antagonist sullies the integrity of US soldiers by portraying them as front men for middle-eastern islamic terrorists. But at least it does show radical islam as the root philosophy behind terror.
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InvictusRose
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 10:57amYes, Beirut is a virtual “Paradise.” This ripped from today’s headlines:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/19/us-lebanon-explosion-idUSBRE89I0N620121019
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jungle J
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 10:47amAnything that borders on truth upsets those that……………………
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RaydocX
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 10:16amI stopped watching most of the way through the first season… It reminds me of a militarized Lost… each episode there are four new mysteries and no solutions to the mysteries of the prior shows, all with people behaving irrationally and suspiciously without raising any alarm, and with only inept or suspicious folks higher in the chain of command.
I could not get around the logic flaws and the breaks in reality, even though i really wanted to… looked like it could have been a great show, but the writers, like all serial writers today, seemed unwilling to let go of the solid villains they had created to tell a good story with confidence they could create new bad guys for future stories.
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Disabledvet
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 10:13amWell tell them to change the channel
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gyro
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 9:59amwell there goes my vacation plans for Beirut
back to my second choice chicago
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RJJinGadsden
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 10:09amLOL, You’re probably still safer going with Beirut.
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Abigail Adams
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 11:31amYou should give Detroit a visit. ;)
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Kevin M
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 9:47amToday in the news – “Lebanon: Massive Car Bomb Rocks Christian Area In Beirut, 8 Killed, 78 Wounded…”
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justangry
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 9:42amI really don’t care who gets pissed off about our TV shows. Them getting their panties in a bunch will probably boost ratings.
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Fubared
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 2:46pmNot angry? How can that be? Just nonplussed? Almost ambivalent?
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Chromo200
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 9:36amReally Beirut a safe city .. Just today a huge car bomb. Daily assassination attempts on the local politician. battles in the north Tripoli, Eastern Lebanon, kidnappings.. The Lebanese army is afraid to go to South Lebanon where the Hezbollah controls the region. Where drons are launched from.
In one year Lebanon will be back in another civil war.
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BODYBAG
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 9:35amSomeone needs to inform these people that its just a TV show.
And a decent one I might add.
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Individualism
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 9:32amBecause maybe they realize its fascist propaganda show like 24 to get people to support this fake non existent war on terror and fascist police state. sorry but the people that i have seen do to the most so called terror attacks on people look like cueballs not muslims.
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Walkabout
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 9:46amI don’t watch the show. On one hand the Lebanese Tourism Minister Fadi Abboud has a valid point about Hamra Street.
On the other hand Shiites & Sunni were going at it last year in Tripoli, Lebanon. South Lebananon has an armed miitia nosing around causing ninternational incidents. That militia would be Hezbollah. They are not the Lebanese army & yet they can attack soverign countries & go toe to toe with the Lebanses army.
So all in all homeland is correct.
Who sent over 1,000 fighters into Syria to kill rebels? HEZBOLLAH.
And South Lebanon is peaceful now. Between 1982 & 1986 Hezobllah killed all the Chrisitans. Peace of the Grave baby!
There is nothing Fascistic about Homeland. The only Fascism comes form Hezboallah & their apologists!
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tzion
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 10:10am@Indy
If anyone’s a fascist here its you. You hold that anyone who even voices support for a country other than the US should be charged with treason, even if said country is an ally. You want all of us to boycott the country with the third most number of companies on NASDAQ for no other reason than said country putting their own survival ahead of American interests. The whole idea of fascism is a “my way or else” approach and if anyone is an embodiment of that idea, its you hands down,
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razhunter100
Posted on October 19, 2012 at 9:25amEaster Island Statues Have Full Bodies and Glyphs!! Encoded Star Maps of Human Origins (HD)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALHTp0eXzJ4&feature=plcp
Obama Was Member Of Gay Bath House”Mans Country”In Chicago
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3pbI3vpfWLk&feature=plcp
enjoy.
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