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Mahdi Fleifel delivers a profoundly personal and often surprisingly funny chronicle of life within the Ain el-Helweh refugee camp in Southern Lebanon, a place that has been home to displaced Palestinians for generations. His feature-length debut is not a detached political analysis but a warm, intimate, and unflinchingly honest portrait of his own family and friends, revealing the universal struggles of community, belonging, and friendship under extraordinary circumstances. Based on a wealth of personal recordings, family archives, and historical footage, Fleifel grants unprecedented access to the camp's one-square-kilometer confines, where over 70,000 residents are caught in a permanent state of suspended animation. This powerful documentary contrasts the deep-seated yearning for a homeland lost in 1948, a dream fervently held by the elders, with the daily realities of the younger men, who grapple with limited opportunities and the crippling frustration of being 'trapped' in place, even if they are technically free to cross the checkpoint. Fleifel, who spent his childhood summers there before his family moved abroad, uses his unique vantage point to explore the complex emotional weight of exile. He tackles the notorious quote, "The old will die and the young will forget", by presenting undeniable proof of a community whose memory and spirit remain fiercely alive despite generations of trauma and waiting. A World Not Ours is a moving testament to resilience, a sharp examination of what it means to belong, and a powerful rebuttal to the idea that time can erase the indelible ties of a people to their past. It’s a compelling look at a community that the world has tried to forget, ensuring their story will not fade away.Raman Chawla