Ibrahim Hassan Sarhan was born in Jaffa in 1915. He was the first Palestinian filmmaker. His first film was a documentary about the visit of Saudi King Abdul Aziz in 1935 and included rare footage of Palestine. He also filmed the visit of Ahmed Hilmi Pasha, a member of the Arab Higher Committee, to Palestine and subsequently founded Studio Palestine in Jaffa. He was displaced to Jordan during the 1948 Nakba, where he participated in the first Jordanian feature film, directed by Wasef Sheikh Yassin, titled “Struggle in Jerash” in 1958.
His Death
He died in 1987 in the Shatila refugee camp near Beirut, Lebanon. [1]
References
^ Alaa Al-Ali (November 2, 2009). “Palestine Was Not a Desert: Sarhan Filmed It.” Al-Akhbar (962). Shatila. Archived from the original on April 3, 2010. Retrieved March 27, 2018

Asma Toubi (1905-1983), a broadcaster, writer, and poet, was born in Nazareth and received her early education there and later in Jerusalem. She then pursued academic studies at the American University of Beirut in 1932. She became the first female broadcaster on Radio Jerusalem in 1936, hosting a weekly program called “A Conversation with Arab Women,” where she addressed women on raising their children, their behavior, and offered guidance in education and work. Several other female broadcasters worked alongside her at the radio station, including Henriette Siksik, Fatima Alami, Rabiha Dajani, and Mary Akawi. She married and moved to Acre, remaining there until the Nakba, after which she was displaced to Beirut.
She authored numerous books and publications. She passed away in 1983 and was buried in Beirut.