16 It is perhaps this absence of interpretation that accounts for the documentary's uneven dissemination. Arna's Children was screened on university campuses, for academic conferences and through the international festival circuit, sharing the Best Documentary Feature Prize at the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival, winning the Fipresci Prize at HotDocs in Canada and making the Official Selection at the 2003 International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam. The documentary's reception in Israel, on the other hand, was initially ‘silenced’, as Mer Khamis notes in a 2006 interview with Maryam Monalisa Gharavi, available at http://southissouth.wordpress.com/2011/04/05/art-is-freedom-without-force-interview-with-the-late-juliano-mer-khamis, retrieved 16 July 2011. It circulated through smaller venues and legwork on the part of Mer Khamis himself, eventually reaching wider audiences and generating a range of responses. It is worth noting that while his work in Jenin was significant to Juliano Mer Khamis's public persona in Israel, he was equally known for his work as a film actor, beginning with 1984's The Little Drummer Girl, and continuing with numerous Israeli films, including Amos Gitai's Kippur and Kedma and, most recently, Julian Schnabel's Miral.