Israel
Slams Britain for Netanyahu Cartoon, Demands Apologies
28
January, 2013
Israeli
ambassador to Britain Daniel Taub has demanded an
official apology today after the Sunday Times published a cartoon
portraying Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu building a wall
on the bodies of Palestinians, insisting it was “classical
anti-Semitism.”
Several
Israeli officials and international Jewish
groups are
up in arms about the cartoon, with Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin
saying that the cartoon “blatantly crossed the line of freedom of
expression.” Yuli Edelstein, Israel’s Public Affairs Minister,
insisted that there was no official response planned. Ambassador Taub
appeared to have other ideas, however, and issued his own statement
shortly thereafter, adding “we’re not going to let this stand.”
The
Anti-Defamation League (ADL) claimed that the cartoon amounted to
blood libel because blood was shown in the cartoon, while the
European Jewish Congress condemned it as “sickening,” noting that
Netanyahu had won an election just days before and claiming that such
a portrayal of the Israeli Prime Minister violates the EU’s
“working definition of antisemitism.”
Israeli
newspaper Haaretz poked
fun at
the
outrage, insisting that Netanyahu is in and of himself neither a
Jewish symbol nor the global representative of the Jews, and
insisting that the claims of “blood libel” were silly and a
distortion of history.
And
while Sunday Times owner Rupert Murdoch condemned the cartoon as
well, and insisted that it should never have been allowed, the
paper’s editor defended
the cartoon, saying that specifically targeting one Israeli official
didn’t amount to anti-Semitism. Needless to say, much of the
Israeli right and their supporters strongly disagree.
Cartoonist
Gerald Scarfe, who has been with the Sunday Times for 44 years,
insisted he “regrets”
that the cartoon was published on Holocaust Memorial Day, saying he
had no idea that would happen.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.