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Leora Chai Working On New Film

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  • Leora Chai Working On New Film

    LEORA CHAI WORKING ON NEW FILM
    By Megan Sprague

    Statesville Record & Landmark
    http://www2.statesville.com/content/2009/ feb/05/leora-chai-working-new-film/entertainment/
    Feb 5 2009

    Leora Chai's name might sound familiar to Mooresville residents who
    enjoyed her locally filmed NASCAR movie. Now, the local director and
    producer said she's taking it to the next level with an investigation
    into the World War I "Freedom Fighters of Nili."

    "Coming from a bi-continental family and having lived in Israel,
    I wanted to look deeper into that history and the stories I've been
    told since age nine," Chai explained. "It just feels like the right
    time to delve into that."

    The Freedom Fighters of Nili were a spy group in Israel started by
    the Aaronsohn family, mainly brother and sister team Aaron and Sarah.

    Chai's Web site offers the following plot summary:

    "When World War I broke out in 1914, Aaron and his friends had enough
    of the brutal Turkish oppression and decided to act. Aaron and his good
    friend, Avshalom Feinberg, organized a spy group, which became to be
    known as Nili. Their mission was to aid the British by supplying them
    with intelligence, to aid in their attack on Jerusalem in Dec. 1917."

    "Aaron was a genius," Chai said. "He studied in Europe, was highly
    intelligent, discovered wild wheat and worked with the British and
    the United States to discuss dry farming issues (before forming the
    "Freedom Fighters"). He also knew more about the landscape of Israel
    better than almost anyone at the time. His work, I think, is often
    overshadowed by his sister."

    She said that Aaron could have brought the entire family to the
    U.S. for a prestigious position at Berkley, but chose not to.

    "The family had a deep pride and passion for Israel and wanted it to
    become its own nation," Chai said.

    Instead, Aaron returned with the funds to start an Agricultural
    Experimentation Station in Atlit, just 12 miles north of Zichron
    Ya'akov, where the family originated and formed the "Freedom Fighters."

    Aaron soon reached out to London for help after his return, as the
    Turks harshly ruled his homeland, and told the British of the Nili
    and their works.

    "The British didn't believe him at first, but the more he spoke and
    the fact that he knew the area so well, they started to believe he
    was legitimate," Chai said. "They took him to Egypt to help gather
    intelligence, where he secretly met with ships on moonless nights about
    every two weeks and used sheets and smoke signals to tell the ship
    it was OK to approach and speak. They would also exchange chocolate,
    soap, sugar and money."

    Sarah Aaronsohn was married and living in Constantinople, but she
    joined her brother after she returned during World War I. Upon
    return, she started to get involved and also supply the British
    with intelligence. On her train ride home, she "witnessed genocidal
    atrocities done to the Armenians by the Ottoman Empire," furthering
    her passion for the cause.

    "At the end of 1916, Aaron traveled to London to make contact with the
    British. Sarah was left in charge to run the Agricultural Station as
    well as organize intelligence," said Chai's Web site. "She led Nili
    as the field and headquarters leader."

    Sarah did visit Aaron in Egypt for a time, but missed being at
    home and working closely with Nili agents. In October of 1917 after
    Sarah's return, a tactical move gone wrong jeopardized the safety of
    the Nili members.

    "The British decided to go back to using messenger pigeons, and one
    of them got loose and was discovered by a local police officer,"
    Chai said. "The officer opened the scroll and freaked out, because
    obviously it was a message written in code, indicating spies. It was
    deciphered and there was definitive proof that spying was going on,
    despite rumors going on for months that could not be confirmed."

    Chai said that Jews at that time severely looked down upon any sort
    of spy activity and several of Sarah's neighbors went to her and
    asked her to stop "that nonsense."

    "Shortly after the note was discovered, they rounded up many of the
    agents, including Sarah, who had stayed at her home, waiting for
    the police to arrive. She had that 'come and get me' attitude," she
    said. "They tortured her for several days, pulling out her fingernails,
    her hair and beating her. She never told about any of the activities
    the Nili had done, and the police decided to transport her to Nazareth,
    possibly to hang her."

    Sarah never made it. She requested to be allowed to go home and clean
    up for the journey, and being a woman worked in her favor, according
    to Chai.

    "She went home and into the bathroom, wrote her last letter, and as
    the guards stood outside her home, waiting for her, she shot herself
    in the mouth," she said. "Sarah died four days later, but her work
    lived on. She and Aaron's works, as well as the rest of the 'Freedom
    Fighters' assisted General Allenby in his invasion on December 12,
    1917."

    Aaron survived the war, but was tragically killed shortly afterward
    in a mysterious plane crash.

    "This part of history is so important and a lot of children learn
    about it in Israel, but I think this is the first documentary ever
    made about this, at least in English," Chai said excitedly. "I hope
    I can distribute it to communities and schools eventually, because
    it's such a fascinating and epic story."

    Most of the documentary will be filmed in Israel, with a few shoots
    in Britain and possibly Egypt.

    "There is a museum in Israel dedicated to the Nili 'Freedom Fighters'
    that has an archive not on display that is phenomenal, with diaries
    and pictures that I will use," Chai said. "I've also located the
    great nephew of the Aaronsohns who has agreed to be interviewed and
    several other historians that will contribute."

    Currently, Chai is raising money for the project and plans to get
    started as soon as the money comes through.
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