Shlomi Eldar
Script error: No such module "AfC submission catcheck".
Shlomi Eldar | |
---|---|
Shlomi eldar.jpg | |
Born | Shlomo Eliyahu February 11, 1957 |
💼 Occupation |
|
📆 Years active | 1990–present |
👶 Children | 5 |
Shlomi Eldar (born February 11 1957) is an Israeli journalist and a documentary film director. He previously worked in the Israeli TV news networks Channel 1 and Channel 10 covering Gaza from 2003 until his resignation in November 2012.
Biography[edit]
Eldar started his career as a host in an Israeli radio network "Reshet Bet" after taking a course on television announcers. In early 1990, he started working at a national television channel, "Channel 1", as an "education expert". A little later he was transferred to be a "south expert", while also covering Gaza after the Oslo Agreement. He was then transferred again, this time to be a "journalist for special matters". During this period, he was sent to the 1999 İzmit earthquake and broadcast the rescue of an Israeli girl from ruins of a building close to the first responders of the home front command. He also worked as an editor for The News Hour and Saturday News at Channel 1.
After the founding of national tv news "Channel 10", Eldar joined them as a "Gaza journalist". In 2005, he published his book, Eyeless in Gaza with the publisher "Yediot Books" which explored the situation in Gaza from his perspective. In 2007, Eldar won the Sokolov Award for his work as a journalist in Gaza. During his time as a journalist in Gaza, he debated many problems with the IDF and visited military work in the occupied territories. He also worked at the ruins during operation rainbow. In June 2006, he tried to prove the IDF bombed 7 kids from the Raila family at the Gaza beach and in 2008, he was detained for questioning after he violated a military order which did not allow entrance for Israelis to Gaza territories. It was found he joined a ship that sailed from Cyprus to Gaza. In his movie, Precious Life, Eldar noted that his Palestinian cameramen was injured by IDF soldiers aiming at Eldar.
During Gaza War (2008–09), Eldar went on a live broadcast when his friend Izzeldin Abuelaish, a doctor from Gaza called him and started crying, revealing that his daughters were killed by the IDF, which launched a lawsuit in 2017 where Abulesh sued Israel for purposely bombing his house.
In 2010, his movie, Precious Life was premiered. The movie was about a Palestinian baby who suffered from a genetic disease which his two sisters had died from, while the Israeli- Palestinian conflict and the war in Gaza was on going. The movie was a huge hit and was broadcast on HBO and screened at Toronto Film Festival. Eldar won his first Sokolov Award from this film.
In 2015, Eldar went on Master Chef VIP, coming in 10th place.
In 2017, Eldar released his film titled Foreign Land which once again won him the Sokolov Award for best director. The movie was set to premier on Kan 11, but the culture Minister Miri Regev criticized the film as being "anti-Zionist" and demanded Kan 11 cancel the premier on the network and pull all the advertisements. The network refused and the film played on its scheduled time and later uploaded on-demand.[1]
Eldar currently resides in the United States with his family.
References[edit]
- ↑ Binyamin, Moshe (2018-02-28). למרות מחאת רגב: כאן 11 ישדר את "ארץ זרה" של שלומי אלדר [Despite Regev's protest: Kan 11 will broadcast Shlomi Eldar's "Foreign Land."]. ice.co.il (in עברית).
Category:Living people
Category:1957 births
Category:Israeli documentary film directors
Category:Israeli journalists
This article about an Israeli journalist is a stub. You can help EverybodyWiki by expanding it. |
This article about an Israeli film director is a stub. You can help EverybodyWiki by expanding it. |
This article "Shlomi Eldar" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Shlomi Eldar. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.
This page exists already on Wikipedia. |