Reservist and playwright Roee Joseph spent sixty days in Shura military base, somewhere in the center of the country. For sixty days, he took part in one of the most complex tasks known to the human mind – identifying victims of a massacre.
For long hours, Roee and the other soldiers recruited for the mission, looked for any identifying marks that would facilitate identification of the dead, and allow burial. On his breaks, Roee took out his computer and began writing. He wrote what he saw, heard, experienced: thoughts, moments that unfolded before his eyes, an exact transcription of what was said around him, and spontaneous interviews with people who were there.
Shura is a deep, poetic, honest, and sometimes funny observation of hardship. Shura understands that in order to bury something, you need to know what it is. Shura is a brave and exposed attempt to enable us all to understand what took place there, and perhaps let it be laid to proper rest.
Roee Joseph is a playwright, director, and performance creator whose work blends documentary theatre, ethnographic tools, and personal experiences. He is the recipient of the Rosenblum Prize for Performing Arts (2024) and the Golden Hedgehog Award for Playwright of the Year (2022).
Roee is a PhD candidate in the Program for Hermeneutics and Cultural Studies at Bar-Ilan University, and an alumni of the Theatre Directing and Teaching Program at Kibbutzim College of Education, Technology and the Arts.
He has also participated in prestigious development programs, including the End Point 1 residency, and the Starting Point 8 playwriting initiative.
Selected works: Hereby, I Declare (a collaboration with Noa Nassie), a documentary play revisiting the killing of Mohammed Qudaih during the 2014 Gaza War, blending official documents and personal accounts to explore silenced stories.
Good Morning Hedgehog – an LGBTQ-themed poetic drama about a crumbling relationship, and the communication difficulties between two ordinary people.
Running Time: 90 minutes
For performance rights to the play: Shimrit Ron, Director, The Hanoch Levin Institute of Israeli Drama
[email protected]
The play was written with the assistance of the Starting Point Program, established by Kvutsat Avoda (NPO).