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Early life

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Cherien grew up in a small town in Ohio,and spent many of her summers in Jordan. Cherien's father was a Palestinian refugee, and at the age of eight years old, she visited Palestine for the first time.[1] She and her family were held at the Israeli border for 12 hours, and she was strip-searched along with her sisters.[1] This incident would make Cherien understand “what it meant to be Palestinian”.[1] She would not return to Palestine until 20 years later.[1]

Back in the U.S, Cherien's hometown was populated predominantly by middle class families from Germanic backgrounds.[6] When she would come back from trips to the Middle East, she would be asked if there were telephones and cars back in Jordan.[6] As a Palestinian American, Cherien refused to be seen as an outsider, and instead chose to assimilate to the culture she found herself within. However, when the Gulf War commenced in 1990, things changed for her and her family. Her father lost many of his patients, her mother was called an "Arab Bitch", and her family began receiving death threats.[6] Although Cherien had no brothers, a rumour began that her father’s “son” was fighting in Saddam Hussein's army. It is also at this time that her family was investigated by the Secret Service because of a rumour that claimed her sister had threatened to Kill George H. W. Bush, who was the president at the time.[6]

It is following these incidents that Cherien claims she faced an identity crisis, wherein she became aware of that fact that she was an “Arab in America”.[6] These events would go on to influence her desire to create films. She was 14 years old when she realized that no one was accurately portraying the lives of Arabs in America. She saw a great need to change the way in which Arabs were portrayed in the media. Years later, she would take filmmaking at Columbia University.

Career

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Cherien is a self proclaimed humanist and describes that "after years spent working in Washington, D.C., I realized that I could reach more people and affect more change through fiction than politics." [1] She says that because she was raised between the Middle East and the Mid-West, she has a unique perspective, one that she wanted to represent in her films.[2] As a result, her films are somewhat autobiographical, and take on themes of immigration, discrimination, cultural assimilation, and family. Her two first feature films compliment one another, and as Cherien puts it, the two "complete a diptych". [6] Amreeka was about being Arab in America, and May in The Summer was about being American in the Middle East.

Her first short film, Make a Wish, premiered at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival and received awards at other festivals.[7] She was a writer with the television series, The L Word from 2006 to 2008.[7]

Dabis made her feature film debut with Amreeka which premiered at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. The film also opened to critical praise other important venues.[7] The DVD for Amreeka was released on January 12, 2010[8] with Make a Wish.

Dabis' second feature film May in the Summer screened at the opening night of the 2013 Sundance Film Festival.[9]

Cherien has two upcoming projects. One will reportedly not tie into her middle-eastern roots and will be a comedy of sorts. The other will be in arabic, and will in fact be set in Palestine.[6]

Amreeka

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Amreeka was Cherien's debut feature film and she says it is "loosely based on things that happened to us during the first Gulf War".[3] It recounts the story of Muna Farah, a Palestinian divorcee, and her son Fadi. Muna works in the West Bank, and everyday she must pick up her son after school. In order to get home, they must cross an Israeli Checkpoint where they are harassed. One day, Muna discovers that she has been awarded a green card though the lottery. Fed up with her living situation, she decides to pack up and leave to the U.S with her son. The film is set following the inavsion of Iraq in 2003, and so the pair have some trouble at customs. After discovering that a cookie box containing her life savings has gone missing at the airport, Muna decides she needs to find a job. However, her many qualifications do not secure her a high paying job, and so she has no choice but to accept a position at white castle. Along side this hardship, Muna also finds out that her family is facing a great deal of discrimination within the post 9-11 and Iraq War context. Her family receives threats, and her brother-in-law loses patients. Later on, Fadi gets into a fight at school with other children who are influenced by the information they are getting from the media. His classmates even go so far as to come to White Castle, and make scathing remarks to Muna, who ends up hurting herself after slipping on a drink poured by one of the kids. When Fadi is arrested after causing a fight following this incident, his principal Mr. Novatski speaks on his behalf and gets him released. The film ends with Muna inviting Mr. Novatski to dinner, and everyone sings and dances.

May in The Summer

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May in the Summer was Cherien's second feature film. The story follows May Brennan, a successful author from New York City who is engaged to Ziad. The two plan to marry in her hometown ofAmman. When she does arrive to Jordan, her mother Nadine, a Born-again Christian, vehemently disapproves of the fact that May is planning on marrying a muslim man. Her younger sisters Dalia and Yasmine are also a handful. Her estranged father Edward also decides to show up and wants to make amends. As her wedding day gets closer, May has to deal with more issues from her past, as she must remember the painful details of her parent's divorce. May in The Summer is a story about the reconciliation of modern and traditional values.

Television

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Cherien began her career as a writer on the show The L Word.

Personal life

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Cherien is currently based in New York City.[2]

Inspiration

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She describes Mike Leigh, John Cassavetes, and Robert Altman as personal influences, as well as films such as “The 400 Blows,” “The Bicycle Thief,” “Ali: Fear Eats the Soul,” “A Woman Under the Influence,” “Working Girl,” “Midnight Cowboy” and “In the Mood for Love.”[2]