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12.10 Sun
2025
From 4:00 PM
To 6:00 PM
Amsterdam
Reserve Tickets
For Free
Checkout in the event's location currency (EUR)

Creative Resistance workshop



This event is free to attend with a suggested donation of €25. To secure your spot, please RSVP by answering the required questions, and consider donating to our crowdfund campaign here: https://www.voordekunst.nl/projecten/19999-2025-palestinian-film-festival-amsterdam.

How do we explore creative ways of speaking out against injustice in Palestine and anywhere in the world? What are the necessary tools? In this workshop, Palestinian writer and theatre director, Ahmed Masoud, explores artistic freedom of expression through working with words, creative stunts and other modes of expressions. Come prepared to share your experience, brainstorm together, and, most importantly, to be with like minded creatives. 
This Sunday workshop is open to everyone, with a maximum of 15 participants. Registration is on a first-come basis, and all participants will be asked to complete a short questionnaire on their interest at registration. 

The Creative Resistance workshop is one of four workshops taking place during the 2025 Palestinian Film Festival Amsterdam. For more details on the festival's programme of workshops, visit: thepffa.nl/pffa-2025/films-and-events.

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Ahmed Masoud is the author of the acclaimed novels Come What May (2022) and Vanished – The Mysterious Disappearance of Mustafa Ouda (2015). Ahmed is a writer, poet and director who grew up in Palestine and moved to the UK in 2002. He is the founder of Al Zaytouna Dance Theatre (2005-2013). After finishing his PhD research, Ahmed published many journals and articles including a chapter in Britain and Muslim World: A Historical Perspective (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011). Most recently, Ahmed launched his new artistic initiative called PalArt Collective. For more information, please see www.ahmedmasoud.co.uk
Creative Resistance workshop

About Organizer

The Palestinian Film Festival Amsterdam (PFFA) envisions an inclusive podium to showcase a diversity of genres, including drama features, shorts, animations and documentaries, presented by both established and emerging Palestinian directors.‍Founded in 2015 by curator and film programmer Nihal Rabbani, the PFFA emerged from a grassroots community action, fueled by a commitment to create a platform that would address the exclusion of indigenous directors from Palestinian film programmes in the Netherlands.‍PFFA’s purpose is to counter the dominance of films and film programmes on Palestine by foreign and amateur directors. Often shot with handheld cameras, these are usually activist documentaries, which, though recording important political content, can tend to overshadow Palestinian voices in film. The ultimate goal of the PFFA platform is to bring visibility to Palestinian directors who are working across genres, including drama features, shorts, animations and documentaries; and to provide screening opportunities for them to share their artistic narratives and cinematographic experiments with audiences.‍The PFFA is the only running festival focused on Palestinian filmmakers in the Benelux region. The festival continues to expand and deepen its representation of Palestinian voices, both in film and from across fields of cultural production (ranging from photography, poetry and literature, to artisanal handcraft and culinary activism).

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