Every once in a while, I come across a movie or documentary that transcends the usual boundaries we’ve come to associate this art form with. “Stay Human” however, is not simply a movie. Nor is it simply a documentary. It’s a Reading Movie giving voice to a man whose life and death are now symbols of Palestinian resistance: Vittorio Arrigoni.

Background

22 days of relentless bombing. Over 1,200 civilians, 400 of whom were children, killed. Vittorio Arrigoni witnessed it all as a member of the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), an organization which has seen many of its members killed including Rachel Corrie, Tom Hurndall and Akram Ibrahim Abu Sba’ as well as several injured. Arrigoni himself was murdered by strangling on the 15th of April 2011.

He was killed not by the Israeli government such as in the cases of Corrie and Hurndall but by Palestinian extremists such as in the case of Abu Sba’. His killers were members of Jahafil Al-Tawhid Wal-Jihad fi Filastin, an extremist Jihadi group linked with Al-Qaeda. The murder was widely condemned across Palestine, including by Hamas which described it as a “disgraceful act by a mentally deviated and outlawed group”, later giving Arrigoni a state funeral. Four Salafist extremists were condemned by a Hamas court. The court sentenced two of them to death but later changed it to life imprisonment after Arrigoni’s parents asked for their lives to be spared.

The Movie

This world of violence that Arrigoni lived in lead him to urge everyone to “Stay Human”, a phrase he would keep on repeating several times until his death. In Italian: Restiamo Umani (Let us stay human).

Vittorio Ariggoni’s diary is read in 6 languages – Italian, Arabic, Spanish, Hebrew, English and French – by 6 Italians, 1 Syrian, 1 Spanish, 4 Israelis/Palestinians, 1 French, 5 Americans and 1 Northern Irish. (Subtitles are available on the YouTube video. Just click play, and then click on the sub icon next to settings and choose your language.)

During just over 3 hours, “Stay Human” asks you to patiently listen to Vittorio Arrigoni’s piercing witnessing of the Gaza Massacre (also known as ‘Operation Cast Lead’) which lasted from December the 27th to January the 18th.

The Readers