AFP/
A scene from the Turkish film Valley of the Wolves:
You cannot kill a Turk with impunity—this is the message to

Valley of the Wolves: Palestine—to be shown in a dozen European countries and more than 20 others in the Middle East—promises to be a blockbuster with Turkish and Arab audiences, but may make life harder for Turkish diplomats at a time when ties with Israel are already in a deep crisis.
“Go and show the world what is really the state of
The May 31 raid on the Turkish vessel claimed the lives of nine Turks, dealt a major blow to once-close Turkish-Israeli ties and triggered a wave of international criticism of the Jewish state.
In the movie, scenes of massacre on the Mavi Marmara are followed by Turkish agent Polat Alemdar stepping in to settle the score—namely to kill the hateful Moshe.
The Turkish hero goes to
A young Jewish-American beauty is also involved in Polat’s adventures and eventually takes up the Palestinian cause.
The movie attracted criticism even before its release as its creators have already been under fire for earlier productions that drew Israeli ire and triggered condemnation at home for glamourising violence and nationalism.
“Even in the fragments we see... some generalisations about the Jewish people and anti-Semitic approaches that are quite disturbing,” Israeli ambassador Gabby Levy said earlier this week, quoted by
In
Valley of the Wolves, which started as a television series in 2003 and became an instant hit, angered Israel in January 2010 with an episode that showed Polat storming an Israeli embassy to rescue a Turkish boy kidnapped by Mossad.
The movie’s creators reject accusations of enmity towards Jews, arguing they target only Zionism and Israeli oppression of the Palestinians.
“In our movie, we are exposing a fascist, racist ideology and we are trying to kill it before the eyes of the people,” scriptwriter Bahadir Ozdener said.
Actor Necati Sasmaz, who plays Polat Alemdar, insisted: “We have no problem with any people. There is no anti-Semitism here.”
Fresh tensions with
A senior Turkish diplomat commented that the production company was motivated by profit following the commercial success—at home and abroad—of their 2006 movie that dealt with the
“Now they believe they will sell well this one too, especially in the Arab world... Undoubtedly, it is not very helpful but we cannot prevent them from doing so,” the diplomat said on condition of anonymity.