‘No Other Land’, a collaboration of Israeli and Palestinian filmmakers, wins Oscar for best documentary

Basel Adra, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal and Yuval Abraham accept the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature Film for "No Other Land" during the Oscars show in Hollywood, Los Angeles, on March 2, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 03 March 2025
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‘No Other Land’, a collaboration of Israeli and Palestinian filmmakers, wins Oscar for best documentary

  • “No Other Land” highlights Palestinian activists fighting to protect their communities from demolition by Israeli military
  • The documentary has not found a US distributor after being picked up for distribution in 24 countries

LOS ANGELES: “No Other Land,” the story of Palestinian activists fighting to protect their communities from demolition by the Israeli military, won the Oscar for best documentary on Sunday.
The collaboration between Israeli and Palestinian filmmakers follows activist Basel Adra as he risks arrest to document the destruction of his hometown, which Israeli soldiers are tearing down to use as a military training zone, at the southern edge of the West Bank. Adra’s pleas fall on deaf ears until he befriends a Jewish Israeli journalist who helps him amplify his story.
“About two months ago, I became a father, and my hope to my daughter that she will not have to live the same life I’m living now, always fearing settlers, violence, home demolitions and forcible displacements,” said Adra.
“No Other Land” came into the night a top contender after a successful run on the film festival circuit. It did not, however, find a US distributor after being picked up for distribution in 24 countries. For the Oscar, it beat out “Porcelain War,” “Sugarcane,” “Black Box Diaries” and “Soundtrack to a Coup d’État.”




Basel Adra, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal and Yuval Abraham accept the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature Film for "No Other Land" during the Oscars show in Hollywood, Los Angeles, on March 2, 2025. (REUTERS)

The documentary was filmed over four years between 2019 and 2023, wrapping production days before Hamas launched its deadly Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel that started the war in Gaza.
In the film, Israeli journalist Yuval Abraham embeds in a community fighting displacement, but he faces some pushback from Palestinians who point out his privileges as an Israeli citizen. Adra says he is unable to leave the West Bank and is treated like a criminal, while Abraham can come and go freely.
The film is heavily reliant on camcorder footage from Adra’s personal archive. He captures Israeli soldiers bulldozing the village school and filling water wells with cement to prevent people from rebuilding.
Residents of the small, rugged region of Masafer Yatta band together after Adra films an Israeli soldier shooting a local man who is protesting the demolition of his home. The man becomes paralyzed, and his mother struggles to take care of him while living in a cave.


Mini op-ed: Why emotional wellbeing is not only an individual concern in Arab societies

Updated 11 sec ago
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Mini op-ed: Why emotional wellbeing is not only an individual concern in Arab societies

ABU DHABI: Across much of the world, emotional wellbeing is now being discussed in similar ways with familiar language: self-care, boundaries, resilience.

These terms have helped people speak more openly about stress and mental health, often for the first time. That matters. But the language also carries an assumption, one that is not always questioned. It suggests that healing begins, and largely takes place, within the individual.

In many Arab societies, that idea does not fully apply. The self is rarely experienced in isolation. Identity forms early through family life, shared responsibility, and social roles that extend beyond personal choice.

Sophie Gregoire Trudeau and Nancy Zabaneh. (Supplied) 

Emotions are often managed in relation to others, not apart from them. This difference has practical consequences, particularly as pressure and uncertainty.

Wellbeing is not just something that happens on a mat or during a six-day retreat, it shows itself in daily life, in our relationships, in how we respond under pressure, and in the choices we make when no one is watching.

That observation runs counter to a global trend that treats emotional health as a private task.

Western approaches have introduced useful tools, including emotional vocabulary, self-reflection, and psychological insight. But when these ideas travel without adaptation, they can overlook the social structures that shape behavior in societies where family and community play a central role.

Healing often begins with the individual in the West. In the East, the sense of self is more closely tied to family, community, and spirituality. Both are powerful — wellbeing lives where self-awareness meets belonging.

In the Gulf, fast economic growth, changing work patterns, and constant digital connection have altered how people live and relate to one another. Traditional support systems still play an important role, but they are under pressure.

At the same time, imported wellness language can feel out of place when it prioritizes inward focus over shared responsibility.

In this region, community and compassion belong together and remain a source of balance and meaning. Emotional awareness, in this setting, is less about self-improvement and more about how people treat one another, whether at home, at work, or during moments of stress.

The UAE has begun to reflect this broader view at a policy level. The National Strategy for Wellbeing 2031 frames emotional and mental health as a part of social wellbeing, not simply personal coping.

That emphasis is reinforced by the government’s designation of 2026 as the Year of Family, which places family relationships at the center of social stability and long-term wellbeing.

Together, these initiatives point to the vital role of families, schools, and workplaces, while leaving open the question of how collective responsibility and individual needs should be balanced in practice.

If there is one message, it is that wellbeing begins with connection to ourselves, to each other, and to what we value most.

As emotional awareness becomes a global language, its meaning will continue to shift. The task ahead may not be choosing between individual insight and collective care, but recognizing where each works, where it falls short, and how the two can exist alongside one another.

Nancy Zabaneh is a Dubai-based wellbeing educator and trauma-informed facilitator of Palestinian origin who has lived and worked in the UAE for more than 25 years. Sophie Gregoire Trudeau is a Canadian author and mental health advocate and has a decade of experience in the public eye as Canada’s former first lady. They are writing ahead of the Kayan Wellness Festival in Abu Dhabi.