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\Sons of Abraham

Raphael Rodan (1980, Israel) and Sahand Sahebdivani (1980, Iran) questioned themselves and their family connection in: Kingdom of Fire and Clay and My Father Held a Gun (winner of the Amsterdam Fringe Gold Award 2017). This time this successful duo takes on the role of someone else.


‘When you love someone so much – you'd rather kill them than leave them’


Two Kurdish brothers Adil and Sami(r) have their last night shift as cleaners of a brothel in the Red Light District. They are about to return to Iraq, to give a dignified farewell to their recently deceased mother. But they have not been honest to each other about their plans...

5 years of living illegaly have changed the brothers. Sami aspires to Western life in its full glory, especially the free thinking. Adil misses the collective sense of life from his home country and has increasingly returned to his religious roots.

While the brothers are cleaning and discussing the impending departure, we go back in time. They tell stories about their flight, discuss Western values, Eastern standards, exclusion, assimilation and wrestle with the immense internal conflict that both brothers experience. Like in many biblical stories, they are tied together by their brotherhood, but is it enough to keep them together?...
 

In Sons of Abraham nothing is what it seems at first glance

 

Credits

Producer: Storytelling Centre

Cast: Raphael Rodan and Sahand Sahebdivani

Director: Tom Radcliffe

Text: Raphael Rodan, Sahand Sahebdivani and Tom Radcliffe

Decor: Mirko Lazović

Photo: Raymond van Mil   

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