Untitled Document
Play on Rachel Corrie canceled by New York theater group
The cancellation of My Name Is Rachel Corrie, the play about the American
student killed by an Israeli bulldozer in March 2003, is a brazen act of censorship
and outrageous cowardice on the part of the New York Theatre Workshop, the Off-Broadway
group that had originally scheduled it.
Rachel Corrie, an activist with the International Solidarity Movement, died
when she attempted to act as a “human shield” and prevent the Israeli
authorities from demolishing the home of a Palestinian family. The home demolitions
were connected to the construction of Israel’s apartheid-style wall that
is being erected to further consolidate its occupation.
My Name Is Rachel Corrie is a solo show that uses a script based on
the journals and e-mail correspondence of the American student in the months
before she was killed. The script was produced by the noted British actor Alan
Rickman and journalist Katharine Viner. The play, directed by Rickman, was staged
at London’s Royal Court Theater last year to great acclaim. Only a month
ago, it was awarded three Theatregoers Choice Awards in London—Best New
Play, Best Solo Performance and Best Director.
What a London audience was able to see without any difficulty, however, will
not be allowed in New York City, the US theatrical capital and a cultural mecca
for the entire world. James Nicola, artistic director of the NY Theater Workshop,
issued a cringing and dishonest statement attempting to justify the play’s
“postponement.”
The New York group lamely claimed that its plans for My Name Is Rachel
Corrie were only tentative. Viner pointed out, however, in an article in
the British Guardian newspaper, that flights had been booked, the production
schedule delivered, the press announcement drafted and tickets already advertised
on the Internet. Rickman denounced the action. “...[C]alling this production
‘postponed’ does not disguise the fact that it has been cancelled,”
said the writer and director of the piece.
According to Nicola, he polled local Jewish religious and community leaders
in New York, and “the uniform answer we got was that the fantasy that
we could present the work of this writer simply as a work of art without appearing
to take a position was just that, a fantasy.”
Thrashing about for further justification, Nicola pointed to the recent victory
of Hamas in the elections in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, as well as the condition
of the comatose Ariel Sharon. These developments had made “this community
very defensive and very edgy, and that seemed reasonable to me,” said
Nicola.
It is likely that Nicola’s “polling” only took place after
pressure was brought to bear, including quite possibly by some wealthy patrons
of the Theatre Workshop itself. In any case, it wasn’t a cross section
of New York theatergoers or even New York’s Jewish population that Nicola
consulted, but the Zionist lobby, which regularly arrogates to itself the right
to decide what will be heard on the airwaves or performed in public.
The idea that the “community” is “edgy” because of
Hamas’s victory or Sharon’s stroke is a preposterous excuse for
censorship. When will the Zionists not be edgy, one wonders? The whole purpose
of Rachel Corrie’s struggle and sacrifice, as embodied in this play, was
to speak out in defense of the basic rights of the Palestinian people against
the Israeli occupation. To argue that the present situation makes the production
of the play untimely is in fact an indirect way of saying that the play itself
makes the defenders of the occupation uncomfortable. As far as the Zionist lobby
is concerned, there will never be a “right” time to present it.
As Katharine Viner puts it in the Guardian on March 1, “anyone
who sees the play, or reads it, realizes that this is no piece of alienating
agitprop.” She relates instances of Israeli and American Jews who saw
it in London and were profoundly moved by it, against their expectations. The
Zionist censors aren’t concerned about agitprop, of course. It is precisely
because the story of Rachel Corrie—in her own words—so mercilessly
exposes the nature of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, that
the spokesmen and apologists for the Israeli regime cannot abide its presentation.
Rachel Corrie was deliberately murdered in order to intimidate the activists
who were exposing Israeli terror in the occupied territories. This murder took
place days before the launching of the invasion of Iraq, where the same methods
were applied to the Iraqi people, including tens of thousands of civilians killed,
Iraqi prisoners brutalized and tortured in Abu Ghraib and elsewhere, and Iraqi
and foreign journalists brutally murdered by US forces in a conscious effort
to silence those who sought to simply tell the truth about the war and occupation.
The silencing of this play is an insult to the memory of Rachel Corrie, and
is bound up with a whole series of attacks on democratic rights, including attacks
on the right to demonstrate, attacks on Muslim and other immigrants, government
wiretapping and the imminent extension of the repressive Patriot Act. The blatant
censorship of My Name Is Rachel Corrie should provoke denunciations
by artists and theater professionals in particular, as well as all defenders
of democratic rights.