For two and a half years, filmmaker Lynne Sachs worked to write and visualize this moving cine-essay on the violence of the Middle East by exchanging personal letters and images with an Israeli friend. The core of her experimental meditation on war, land, the Bible, and filmmaking is a portrait of Revital Ohayon, an Israeli filmmaker and mother killed in a terrorist act on a kibbutz near the West Bank. Without taking sides or casting blame, the film embraces Revital's story with surprising emotion, entering her life and legacy through home movies, acquired film footage, news reports, interviews, and letters. Buenos Aires International film Festival; San Francisco Cinematheque, Pacific Film Archive, Iowa Documentary Festival, Millennium Film, New York Underground Film Fest, Cinequest, San Jose Film Festival. US Premiere Margaret Mead Film Festival, International Premiere Jerusalem Film Festival. Supported by NYSCA and Jerome Foundation. Nominated as One of the 10 Best Documentaries of 2005 on Senses of Cinema.com