Warsaw Jewish Film Festival

The Warsaw Jewish Film Festival (Warszawski Festiwal Filmów o Tematyce Żydowskiej) is an annual Jewish film festival held in Warsaw, Poland. Organized in 2003 by American film director Daniel Strehlau, it was the first one of this type on Poland, and one of the first and largest in the Eastern Europe.

The main idea of the festival is to present both the contemporary and traditional culture of the Jewish people. It is the continuation of the cultural tradition started with the Jewish Culture Festival in Kraków in 1988.

The festival is a member of the Association of European Jewish Film Festivals, which was established during the World Conference of Jewish Film Festival Directors in Boston in 2004.

Awards
The festival issues annual awards for films on Jewish topics. Its Grand Prix is called "David's Camera" (Kamera Dawidova), sketched on the festival's logo. It is issued separately for categories of full-length films and of shorts.

2018

 * Stephane Kaas (director), Rutger Lemm (writer), Etgar Keret: Based on a True Story (2017). David Camera Award Best Documentary Feature
 * Brandon Gross (director), Skyler Gross (director), On My Way Out: The Secret Life of Nani and Popi (2017), about Roman (Popi) and Ruth (Nani) Blank, Holocaust survivors. David Camera Award, Best Short Documentary

2006

 * Roman Polanski David's Camera Award for his film The Pianist and for his lifetime contribution in cinematography.