Al-Kasaba Theatre and Cinematheque (Arabic: القصبة مسرح وسينماتك) is a cinema in the city of Ramallah, West Bank, Palestine. It was established in 1970 during Israeli occupation for playwrights and eventually began presenting films. Al-Kasaba is the only official multipurpose cinema in the Palestinian territories.[1]

Al-Kasaba Theatre and Cinematheque

History

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Al-Kasaba was originally established in Jerusalem in 1970 as the Theatre Arts Group. In 1984, it was renamed Shawk Theatre. In 1989 it was renovated to host films. In 1998, the renovation of Al-Jameel Cinema in Ramallah, which closed-down in 1987, became Al Kasaba Theatre and Cinematheque. The cinema opened in 2000 and is one of the few venues in the region that allows Palestinian artists, actors and filmmakers to produce and present their productions.[2]

Early 2002 the theatre hosted Nobel Literature Prize laureates Wole Soyinka and Jose Saramago. A few weeks later, during the April 2002 invasion of Ramallah, the theatre was targeted by the Israeli army. The offices of the theatre were ransacked, and files and computers destroyed.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ About Al-Kasaba Theatre Archived 2008-03-03 at the Wayback Machine Al-Kasaba Official Website.
  2. ^ History of Al-Kasaba Theatre[permanent dead link] Al-Kasaba Official Website
  3. ^ Annemarie Jacir: ""For Cultural Purposes Only": Curating a Palestinian Film Festival." p.26 in Dabashi, Hamid, and Said, Edward (preface) (2006): Dreams Of A Nation: On Palestinian Cinema, Verso Books, London, United Kingdom, ISBN 1-84467-088-0.
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31°54′8.89″N 35°12′14.12″E / 31.9024694°N 35.2039222°E / 31.9024694; 35.2039222