Issues & Analyses, Resources for Educating Remotely

A Guide for Streaming Israeli Content

April 20, 2020

 In this new world of social distancing and staying at home, life can slip into a monotonous routine, but there are good ways to liven up your time at home. One is by watching captivating television. But even that can become stale. How many times can you watch Love Is Blind, Tiger King or The Office? Instead, try streaming shows that deal with Israel. The past twenty years have seen an onslaught of exciting, mesmerizing and thrilling productions that offer insights into the nuances of Israel’s history and culture. Below are eight Israeli shows and movies to watch, plus analytical reviews on the truth behind each title. 

Srugim (2008-12); 45 episodes; Hebrew with English subtitles; Amazon Prime Video 

Via Amazon/yes.

Srugim focuses on a group of single Religious Zionists in their late twenties and early thirties who live in Jerusalem. Srugim examines the characters’ search for love and meaning amid the conflicting tensions of religious observance and secular society. The title is a reference to the crocheted kippahs worn by Religious Zionist men. Srugim won the 2009 Israeli Academy of Film and Television awards for Best Drama Series, Best Script and Best Costume Design, and Ya’el Sharoni (Yifat) won Best Actress. 

From a historical perspective, Srugim deals with many challenging concepts, especially the tension between the religious and secular Jewish communities and the tension within the Religious Zionist community. 

For more on Religion, Judaism and Zionism, check out the following on the CIE website:

Religion and State

How Jewish Israelis Feel Towards Non-Jews

David Ben-Gurion’s “Vision and Redemption”

Video Lecture: Religious Zionism

Video Discussion: The Intersection of Religion and Politics

Operation Finale (2018); 2 hours and 3 minutes; English; Hulu

Via Hulu/Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Operation Finale is based on a true story and follows the thrilling and exhausting hunt by Mossad officers to capture former SS officer Adolf Eichmann in 1960. The eight-person Mossad team discreetly travels to Argentina to find Eichmann with the hope of bringing him to Israel to stand trial. 

From a historical perspective, Operation Finale tries to come to grips with the trauma that many Israelis felt about the Holocuast after the establishment of the state of Israel. On a more basic level, Operation Finale attempts to tell a story about a harrowing mission by clandestine operatives to capture a now-domesticated mass murderer. 

For more on the Eichmann trial and the Holocaust’s impact on Israeli society, check out the following on the CIE website:

Adolf Eichmann Trial Begins in Jerusalem

Hausner Requests Death Penalty for Adolf Eichmann

Knesset Passes Resolution for Creating Yom Hashoah (Holocaust Memorial Day) 

Harrison Report Confirms Deplorable Conditions of DP Camps

Israel Accepts German Reparations

Our Boys (2019); 10 episodes; Hebrew and Arabic with English subtitles; HBO

Via HBO/Keshet

Our Boys is based on the events that led to the war in Gaza in 2014. The miniseries follows the investigation of Palestinian teen Mohammed Abu Khdeir’s murder and tells the story of all those involved, specifically the Shabak (Israel’s internal security agency) operators who attempt to unearth the killers of Abu Khdeir. This project, a co-production of HBO and Israel’s Keshet Studios, is a searing look into the lives and attitudes of Mizrahi Religious Zionists and Palestinians living in the East Jerusalem area. The miniseries was created by Israelis Joseph Cedar and Hagai Levi and Palestinian Tawfik Abu-Wael.

From a historical perspective, Our Boys tries to resurface the visceral feelings that have been expressed and sometimes repressed about the past decade of the conflict.  

For more on the conflicts between Israel and Gaza, check out the following on the CIE website:

Gaza-related content

The Spy (2019); 6 episodes; English; Netflix

Via Netflix

The Spy is quite simple. Based on a true story, the series follows Eli Cohen (played by Sacha Baron Cohen) from being a new Israeli immigrant from Egypt to being a deep-cover Mossad operative in Syria. The show takes place over many years and deals with how Cohen reconciles his love for Israel with his undercover identity within elite Syrian society. 

From a historical perspective, The Spy explores multiple areas of Middle East history. On an Israeli level, it shows the struggles of Mizrahi immigrants to integrate into Israeli society. It also shows how fragile Israel’s place in the Middle East was in the 1950s and 1960s before the Six-Day War. Lastly, The Spy gives an inside look at the coup d’etat against Syrian President Nazim al-Kudsi. 

For more on Eli Cohen and Israeli intelligence operations, check out the following on the CIE website:

Eli Cohen Is Arrested on Charges of Espionage

Israeli intelligence-related content 

Shtisel (2013-16); 24 episodes; Hebrew and Yiddish with English subtitles; Netflix

Via Netflix/Dori Media

Shtisel follows the lives of a Haredi family in Jerusalem still reeling from the death of their matriarch. The series premiered in June 2013 on Israeli channel Yes Oh and gained instant critical notoriety. It won many Ophirs, the Israeli Emmys, including Best Drama, Best Actor, Best Directing and Best Script in a Drama Series. 

From a historical perspective, Shtisel does not try to do much. The point of the show, according to co-creators Yehonatan Indursky and Ori Elon, is to “write a true, clear-eyed view of what ultra-Orthodox life is really like.”

For more on Israel’s ultra-Orthodox community, check out the following on the CIE website:

Video Lecture: The Haredim and the State of Israel 

Israel On Board Video: Haredim and the IDF

Analysis: Mass Haredi Protest in Brooklyn: A Symptom of a Greater Tension Between the Ultra-Orthodox and Israel

A Tale of Love and Darkness (2015); 1 hour and 35 minutes; Hebrew with English subtitles; Netflix

Via Netflix/United King Films/Focus

A Tale of Love and Darkness is set in the Jewish part of Jerusalem in the last years of Mandatory Palestine and the first years of independent Israel. Based on renowned Israeli writer Amos Oz’s 2002 book of the same name, it follows a young Amos as he navigates family life, growing up and the birth of the state. This movie is Natalie Portman’s directorial debut (she also stars as Fania, Amos’ depressed mother). 

From a historical perspective, A Tale of Love and Darkness gives the audience only a taste of the surroundings and periods of the movie. It’s subtle, but the movie (like the book) hints at what life was like, what the mood was like Nov. 29, 1947, when the United Nations adopted a plan to partition Mandatory Palestine, what the world felt like after independence, and what the state was like in its early years.

For more on Mandatory Palestine, check out the following on the CIE website:

The Mandate for Palestine

U.N. General Assembly Resolution 181 (The Partition Plan) 

David Ben-Gurion’s “Vision and Redemption”

Immigration

Hatufim (Prisoners of War) (2009-2012); 24 episodes; Hebrew and Arabic with English subtitles; Hulu

Via Hulu/Keshet

Hatufim begins with the return of two soldiers who had been imprisoned for 17 years after being captured in Lebanon. The show explores the reintegration of the soldiers into a society which has made them national icons and into an interrupted family life, while working through the trauma of having been prisoners for so long. In 2010 it won the Israeli Academy Award for Television for Best Drama Series. The premise was adapted into the acclaimed Showtime series Homeland

From a historical perspective, Hatufim dealt with the huge national trauma of Israeli prisoners of war. At the time of its premiere in 2010, multiple Israeli soldiers were missing in action (presumed captured) or were known to be held captive by such adversaries as Hamas and Hezbollah. The country was still reeling from a string of kidnappings in 2006. Three soldiers were announced missing that summer: Ehud Goldwasser, Eldad Regev and Gilad Shalit. In June 2008 the bodies of Goldwasser and Regev were returned to Israel in exchange for five Hezbollah terrorists. With little progress in finding Shalit, his family set up a protest tent in front of the prime minister’s house in 2009. When Hatufim came out in the midst of the national crisis surrounding Shalit, the show received record ratings. In 2011, Shalit was released in exchange for 1,027 Palestinian prisoners

For more on Gilad Shalit and Israeli prisoners of war, check out the following on the CIE website:

 Gilad Shalit Is Captured

 Israel Swaps 430+ Prisoners for Man, 3 Bodies

Hamas Abducts Israeli Soldier

Operation Pillar of Defense Begins

Fauda (2015-); 36 episodes; Hebrew and Arabic with English subtitles; Netflix

Via Netflix/yes 

Faudaportrays a Mista’arvim unit in the IDF as it pursues terrorists. Mista’arvim units are special counter-terror units whose members are capable of posing as Palestinians to help apprehend suspects. It is an intense and action-packed show whose popularity has risen since it began airing on Netflix. Named one of the best shows of 2017 by The New York Times, Fauda was an international hit. In 2018, BDS supporters urged Netflix to terminate the show. Fauda has won 17 awards at the Israeli Academy Awards, including Best Drama Series twice. Season 3 premieres on Netflix on April 16, 2020

From a historical perspective, Fauda is much more contemporary than anything else on this list. It is set in the present, and many of its nuances (highlighting intra-Palestinian political disagreements or using certain technology) would not make much sense in previous years. 

For more on Israel’s special units as well as some context about the history of television in Israel, check out the following on the CIE website:

Mossad Is Created

Analysis: The Widening Military-Political Gap in Israel

Analysis: The Technology That Could Save Us From Deep Fake Videos

Israel On Board Video: Technology

Israeli TV Goes on the Air

Exit mobile version