Leaders decry illustration after 'Süddeutsche Zeitung' publishes Israel as wild, hungry beast devouring German military weapons.
The
largest German daily broadsheet --the Munich-based Süddeutsche
Zeitung-- published a photo of a cartoon on Tuesday depicting Israel
as a wild, hungry, ill beast devouring German military weapons. The
cartoon sparked criticism from Jewish organizations in Germany and the
US.
Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Simon
Wiesenthal Center, told The Jerusalem Post by email on Tuesday that his
organization "decries the illustration depicting Israel as a monster in a
leading German newspaper." He said the cartoon was "grotesquely beyond
the pale of legitimate criticism and invokes one of the classic
anti-Semitic tools: Animalization is a classic and effective tool in
dehumanizing an enemy, something Nazi and Soviet propaganda deployed
over and over again."
The cartoon was the work of
Ernst Kahl, who told the Jewish newspaper Jüdische Allgemeine Zeitung
that had he been asked, he would have rejected the paper's use of his
cartoon in conjunction with two book reviews about Israel; one of which
covered American Jewish author Peter Beinart's book The Crisis of
Zionism.
Under the cartoon, the Süddeutsche wrote,
"Germany is serving. Israel has been given weapons for decades and
partly free of charge. Israel's enemies think it is a ravenous Moloch.
Peter
Beinart deplores that it has come to this." The headline on the book
review pages reads, "The downfall of liberal Zionism." Cooper declared
that "the characterization of the Jewish state as a 'ravenous Moloch' is
a canard. The attempt to deploy a Jewish critic [Beinart] as a fig leaf
does not cover up the hate." He urged the newspaper's editors to
"apologize to its readers, the Jewish community and the State of
Israel," and he expressed hope that "the main protests against this
illustration and captions are forthcoming from German NGOs and
personalities."
In an interview with Jüdische
Allgemeine Zeitung, Dr. Dieter Graumann, head of the Central Council of
Jews in Germany, termed the cartoon "almost on the level of Stürmer" -
a reference to the anti-Semitic Nazi newspaper Der Stürmer.
He expressed shock that "anti-Semitic associations" were allowed in the paper.
The
Süddeutsche employee responsible for the placement of the cartoon was
Franziska Augstein the sister of Jakob Augstein, whom the Wiesenthal
Center cited in its list of last year's top 10 anti-Semitic and
anti-Jewish statements. He writes a column for Der Spiegel.
Alex
Feuerherdt, a journalist who has written extensively about modern
German anti-Semitism, told the Post that this was not the first time the
Süddeutsche had published "incitement articles against Israel." He
cited a December 2012 article with the headline "Netanyahu against the
entire world," which claimed that Israel was working against the entire
international community. Feuerherdt said the article reinforced
anti-Semitic stereotypes that Jews were egotistical and only concerned
with narrow self-interest.
In 2012, the paper published
Günter Grass's poem "What Must Be Said," which attacks Israel for
wanting to wipe out the Islamic Republic of Iran.
The
Süddeutsche issued a statement on its website Tuesday, under the title,
"Is a Horned Monster Anti-Semitic?" The paper wrote that the cartoon had
"nothing to do with anti-Semitic clichés," but added that as "the photo
led to misunderstandings, it would have been better to have chosen a
different photo."
http://www.jpost.com/Jewish-World/Jewish-News/German-paper-publishes-anti-Semitic-cartoon-attacking-Israel-318473

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