The recent Oscar winning film Zone of Interest made a controversial claim about the human condition. What can we take from it?

The recent Oscar winning film Zone of Interest made a controversial claim about the human condition. What can we take from it?
Saoirse Ronan shines in ‘Blitz’, a kaleidoscopic portrait of Londoners during the bombings of World War II.
Leaving behind their destroyed home in Gaza City, Rami and Sana’s family sought refuge in a local Australian church.
“My heart aches for every mother that’s in Gaza and in Lebanon,” cries an Australian Mum living in Israel, as conflict intensifies in the Middle East.
The Gospel isn’t explicit on screen, but it’s historically known that teaching about Jesus’ blood led to many Māori pursuing peace & harmony.
A fine balance between fact and fiction, The Wild Date Palm is based on a true story of family espionage in World War I.
From the opening scene, Civil War announces a cautionary message of the United States’ potential to destroy itself from the inside.
This triumph of a film is delicate and caring in depicting the story of saving hundreds of children across a continent infected by the Nazis.
While I respect Obama in many ways, I have concerns about his popular view that ‘nobody’s hands are clean’ in the Israel-Hamas war.
Since the October 7 massacre of Israelis by Hamas, the attacks on Jewish people outside of Israel have increased.