Israel to demand apology for ‘anti-Semitic’ Netanyahu cartoon

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Israel to demand apology for ‘anti-Semitic’ Netanyahu cartoon

Israel is planning to demand an apology for a controversial cartoon that appeared in the British Sunday Times, Israel’s ambassador to London said Monday, while one minister mulled steps against the paper.

One day after the caricature sparked outrage among Jewish groups for its depiction of a bloodthirsty Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu building a wall with the blood and bodies of Palestinians, leading Israelis joined the chorus of condemnation.

“The newspaper should apologize for this. We’re not going to let this stand as it is,” Israeli Ambassador to London Daniel Taub told The Times of Israel in a telephone interview. “We genuinely think that a red line has been crossed and the obligation on the newspaper is to correct that.”

Taub added that he was going to meet with the newspaper’s editor “at the earliest opportunity, perhaps already today,” to express the government’s concern about a cartoon that draws “on classical anti-Semitic themes.”

In a meeting Monday with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Tony Blair, the representative of the Middle East quartet who’s also a former British premier, deplored the caricature, noting the timing of its publication on International Holocaust Remembrance Day, according to a press release from the Prime Minister’s Office.

Earlier on Monday, Public Diplomacy and Diaspora Affairs Minister Yuli Edelstein told Army Radio that the government would probably refrain from filing an official complaint with the London-based paper. However, he said, “We will think about how to act against the paper’s representative here in Israel.”

The cartoon is “certainly” anti-Semitic, Edelstein asserted. “I don’t think there is any other possible way to interpret it,” he said, adding that its publication on International Holocaust Remembrance Day was particularly hurtful, a sentiment shared by Taub.

Responding to an outcry from Jewish groups — Efraim Zuroff, director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Israel office, called the cartoon “absolutely disgusting” and said it “makes all the talk of fighting anti-Semitism seem irrelevant,” and Michael Salberg of the Anti-Defamation League said “The Sunday Times has clearly lost its moral bearings — a spokesman for the newspaper told The Times of Israel Sunday the cartoon was not anti-Semitic but critical of the prime minister’s policies, as it was “aimed squarely at Mr. Netanyahu and his policies, not at Israel, let alone at Jewish people.”

Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin wrote a letter Monday to his British counterpart, Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow, expressing the Israeli people’s “extreme outrage” at the cartoon, which was drawn by veteran caricaturist Gerald Scarfe.

“For me and for other Israelis, this cartoon was reminiscent of the vicious journalism during one of the darkest periods in human history,” Rivlin wrote. While government authorities should not attempt to control the media and must grant freedom of speech, many Israelis are “shocked that such cartoons can be published in such a respectable newspaper in the Great Britain of today, fearing that such an event is testimony to sick undercurrents in British society.”

Scarfe’s cartoon, captioned “Israeli elections: Will cementing peace continue?”, “blatantly crossed the line of freedom of expression,” Rivlin added.

Jewish Agency chairman Natan Sharansky drew a direct connection between the cartoon and the increase in anti-Semitic violence that took place in 2012.

“There is a very tragic alliance between primitive, anti-democratic, nationalist, racist, fundamentalist forces who are committing most of the violence, and enlightened, liberal, intellectual representatives of the intelligentsia in Europe,” Sharansky told The Times of Israel. By using clear double standards towards Israel, Western intellectuals evidently accept the delegitimization of Israel and are thus “helping to justify” anti-Jewish violence, he said. While Israel respects other nations’ right to freedom of speech, it is was “necessary and important” to label people such as Scarfe, the cartoonist, as anti-Semites, he added.

Some Israelis came to Scarfe’s defense. Haaretz correspondent Anshel Pfeffer listed several reasons the cartoon was “not anti-Semitic by any standard”: the cartoon, he argued, isn’t directed at Jews, features no Jewish symbols and does not use Holocaust imagery.

Rupert Murdoch, the billionaire CEO of News Corp., which owns The Times, nevertheless tweeted a harshly worded apology.

Israel to demand apology for 'anti-Semitic' Netanyahu cartoon | The Times of Israel
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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Red Deer AB
Ido, I totally expected this thread to be on page 2 or 3 by now. Is there some sort of censorship in effect, if so it should be extended to all religious and political based threads.

How about your own opinion OP, it is your thread afterall.
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

Satelitte Radio Addict
May 28, 2007
14,612
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Toronto, ON
Obviously the proper course of action is to storm the Times headquarters with armed gunmen and shoot everybody inside. That is the proper response when one is offended.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
I think you have to let the Times tell them to go fuk themselves first, or refuse to take it down and/or refuse any apology.
I notice one opinion that you missed is telling them to develop a sense of humor, that is the only choice the Muslims were given.

Obviously the proper course of action is to storm the Times headquarters with armed gunmen and shoot everybody inside. That is the proper response when one is offended.
There will be a few dead in Gaza, that satisfy your bloodlust?
 

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
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Northern Ontario,
The French cartoons were a perceived insult to a long dead prophet .....

The English cartoons were depicting and a perceived insult to living people....

Now if they would be insulted by a cartoon depicting Moses, then you would have a similarity...
 

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
21,887
847
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Saint John, N.B.
Yes, the cartoon is rabidly anti-Semitic.

And if Netanyahu had shut up, neither I nor several hundred thousand if not million people would have seen it.

Expect no apology.

If you defend peoples' right to offend, you should not cry when you are offended.

Mind you, and this is important, Netanyahu is not sending out a hit squad.

To demand apology... but the Mossad will not be storming any news outlets.

You said it first.....exactly correct.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
Yes, the cartoon is rabidly anti-Semitic.

And if Netanyahu had shut up, neither I nor several hundred thousand if not million people would have seen it.

Expect no apology.

If you defend peoples' right to offend, you should not cry when you are offended.

Mind you, and this is important, Netanyahu is not sending out a hit squad.



You said it first.....exactly correct.

I'll agree to this.

I think the only real faux pas here is if anyone is a rabid promoter of free speech, but felt this toon should be removed.

At least the forum is logically consistent.


You all passed the test.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
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Red Deer AB
Snipers and poisons aren't storming activities. Ow, mosquitoes in the middle of winter, damn, maybe evolution is real after all. Wow, nap time already, just did 16 hours and how come my comp is back on. So, sup?