Hamdan Ballal, one of the Palestinian co-directors of Oscar-winning documentary No Other Land was attacked by a mob of Israeli settlers on Monday and then arrested by Israeli soldiers, according to the documentary’s Israeli co-director Yuval Abraham.
In a post on X, Abraham reported: “A group of settlers just lynched Hamdan Ballal, co-director of our film No Other Land. They beat him and he has injuries in his head and stomach, bleeding. Soldiers invaded the ambulance he called and took him. No sign of him since.”
Ballal is one of four co-directors on No Other Land, alongside fellow Palestinian filmmaker and activist Basel Adra, Abraham and Israeli cinematographer, editor and director Rachel Szor.
Shot between 2019 and 2023, No Other Land captures the struggle of people living in the West Bank Palestinian villages of Masafer Yatta in the face of attempts by Israeli authorities and settlers to erase their homes and history from the map.
Israeli settlers have continued to attack the area since the film’s Oscar win on March 2.
The documentary follows the journey of Adra as he documents the devastation of his hometown, after it is designated for Israeli military training. His efforts to raise awareness gain momentum with the support of Israeli journalist Abraham, who amplifies his narrative.
The work world premiered at 2023 Berlinale, where it won the Audience Award and Berlinale Documentary Award, with Abraham sparking controversy after he criticized a “situation of apartheid” in Israel and called for a ceasefire in Gaza in his acceptance speech.
Abraham subsequently received death threats and was accused of antisemitism. The journalist and filmmaker, who is descended from a family that was decimated in the Holocaust, has categorically refuted these accusations.
Since its premiere, No Other Land has won 68 film festival and annual award prizes, including the European Film Awards, the Boston Society of Film Critics’ Awards and the Gotham Independent Film Awards.
However, the film was unable to secure a distributor in the U.S., and its Best Documentary victory category in the 2025 Academy Awards, marked the first time a documentary had won an Oscar without a distribution company attached.