Palestinians want “peace and liberty,” Emad Burnat said during his acceptance speech. (International Emmy Awards photo)

Emad Burnat’s 5 Broken Cameras took the prize for best documentary at the International Emmy Awards in New York City on Monday evening.

“It’s a big honor to be the first Palestinian to win an Emmy award,” Burnat told the elite industry crowd in his acceptance speech (watch it here).

“I made this film … to share my story with you and all the world. We want what you want — peace and liberty. We want a good future for our kids so we need your support and your help. Free Palestine,” he concluded.

5 Broken Cameras is an intimate portrayal of the grassroots resistance movement in Bilin village in the occupied West Bank, featuring footage and narration by Burnat, one of the leaders of the popular protests brutally repressed by the Israeli army.

The film was nominated for an Oscar for best documentary earlier this year.

A World Not Ours awarded at DOC NYC

A World Not Ours, Mahdi Fleifel’s deeply personal film showing multiple generations of exile in Ein al-Hilwe refugee camp, has won yet another award, taking top prize at the DOC NYC festival.

The documentary was given the grand jury prize in the Viewfinders Competition, which honors films for their “distinct directorial visions.”

The jurors, who include producers for The Colbert Report and Al Jazeera TV and a marketing director of a major independent movie distributor, stated:

Director Mahdi Fleifel has drawn on his family’s home movies, archival footage, and his own extensive video diaries to invite us into a world completely unfamiliar to most viewers, and one from which most residents cannot leave. Unlike his friends and family who have spent decades living in the camp, Fleifel is free to come and go – but his portrayal of the world of the camp stayed with us long after his film ended.

A World Not Ours also picked up the Reel Talent Award at the Copenhagen International Documentary Film Festival earlier this month.

Meanwhile, in other Palestine film news:

The director, now 44, narrates the story of his family’s rough landing in America from Iraq. Usama’s mother is Palestinian, his father Iraqi. He and his siblings, one of whom was born in the US, grew up speaking English. … In the documentary, three girls whose family recently fled Iraq tell of being stigmatised whenever Osama bin Laden is mentioned, although they barely know who he was. A punk rocker from the band Al-Thawra, Marwan Kamel, ignores prejudice, yet his tearful Polish mother (his father is Syrian) talks of her fears when the phone rang with threats to her family. A Palestinian woman, Amal Abusumayah, recalls an angry American trying to remove her hijab at a supermarket. She took the case to court as a hate crime, and won.

Zochrot is holding an International Film Festival on Nakba and Return this weekend in Tel Aviv and Jaffa this weekend, which marks the 66th anniversary of the 1947 UN resolution on the partition of Palestine. According to the festival website, “The festival seeks to creatively challenge the partition concept and suggest new pathways for just and equitable life for all of this divided country’s present inhabitants and refugees.” The festival includes new short films produced especially for the event.