Avinoam and his son Barak are called to take care of the problem with the irrigation pipe in the field, this is their job, to take care of the irrigation pipes that irrigate the fields. During the repair, they both feel it coming, a gust of war coming from the direction of neighboring Gaza.
Directors Statement:
I was born in Kibbutz Kfar Gaza in 1986. The eldest son of two urban parents who chose come to Kibbutz to fulfill the dream of a house with a garden. My father, a handsome, strong and tough man, decided to give me the name Yahav - security, hope. From the moment I was born, I felt the yoke of God on my shoulders, because in my head there were dreams, reflections and high sensitivities that made me cry from almost every situation. I grew up in the kibbutz as an alpha male blessed with blue eyes and an athletic body, one who was prophesied to be an elite officer or even, if he really succeeded, a pilot. But I, for as long as I can remember, have felt split. A boy who fails to grow up. Trying to be serious and concentrate on the "important" things in life like cars, business and money, but I couldn't. Instead I grabbed a guitar and sang. Or I told stories. Life in the kibbutz as a child I remember as heaven on earth. Green lawns, a pool, paths you can walk on barefoot. I only remember the nights as scary. I sleep in a bunk bed with my little brother under me, unable to fall asleep because of the sounds of the muezzin coming from Gaza. My father was angry with me for not falling asleep. In 2006, Paradise started to become less magical. Israel-Gaza relations began to heat up and souvenirs from Gaza in the shape of exploding pipes began to fall on the kibbutz. One day an exploding pipe fell on my neighbor Jimmy, my best friend's father, and I was the first to see him. This event carved a hole in my heart and from that moment I embarked on a path from which the return was long. Shortly after the incident, I left the army on my own accord. My father, my beacon, took it very hard. His child went crazy, and the whole kibbutz knew. Chronic knee pain began to develop for him. But instead of being angry with me, he internalized it and did an act of his that I will cherish to this day - he took me to work with him in the field, so that I would be close to him. We would drive in silence, father and son on the tractor, yellow wheat fields to our left, Gaza to our right. We didn't talk much, but in those days it was a lifeline for me. He was my hero. I remember that somewhere I developed an awareness of wars, as absurd as they are but inevitable. The tanks and jeeps that used to travel in our fields, trampling the farmers' work without recognition because everything is kosher when it comes to a military operation, would travel on the way to small and cunning Gaza, "to show them what it is" and who knows what kind of life they will harvest there. There were days when I couldn't digest the thought that whole families were being wiped out three kilometers from me and we have another cooking show on TV. In my film I try to capture a tragic and human triangle of the therapist, the patient and the absurd. My father - the therapist, I - the patient and the impossible and endless situation of the envelope and the Gaza Strip - the absurdity.
They continue their day as usual, but in Barak something familiar begins to arise, this feeling of not being able to accept what is happening there beyond the fence, the explosions, the shooting, the killing.
In the middle of the night, Avinoam wakes up to the sound of a red alarm and discovers that Barak is not in his room. He goes out together with his young son Ido to look for him, driving the vehicle tractor which is like a part of his body.
In the darkness of the fields he finds Barak lying on the ground above him the security man Gideon, preventing Barak from running to Gaza with his body. Avinoam realizes that his son is in a severe psychotic attack and all he can do is give him his tranquilizer, which he refuses to take himself. A military jeep arrives, the army was also jumped in light of the dangerous situation, and Avinoam is helpless, promising that this will not happen again. Avinoam and Barak comfort each other at sunrise, knowing that nothing is going to change.
Yahav Winner was killed by the Hamas terror attack on Kibbutz Kfar Aza on October 7, 2023.
Yahav Winner
Ben Peled
Rotem Dror
Yoram Toledano, Nimrod Peleg
Gesher multicultural film fund, Minshar for art
Yahav Winner - Yahav Winner war Schauspieler und Regisseur, bekannt für The Boy, Unter deinen Händen (2020) und Capricious Manifest (2014).