I attended a conference this week on the subject of anti-Semitism and met up with Sharon Alshul who authored the report below. so why try to reinvent the wheel. Thanks Sharon. The full report with photos can be seen here.
By: BJLIfe/Sharon Altshul
The antisemitic BDS campaign is growing in
mainstream media and also on American campuses
At a June 11th event hosted by CAMERA at the
Kahn Theatre in Jerusalem, Israel, a panel of experts examined how expressions
of anti-Jewish bigotry have gained ground and acceptance in the media and on
college campuses.
Co-sponsored by the
Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs and The Israel Innovation Fund, IIF, the
event’s title initially emphasized that antisemitism is often hidden under the
veil of human rights.
“Why now?” asked David
Hazony cofounder of IIF in his opening remarks, “Is it possible that
antisemitism and assimilation are two sides of a coin?”
“The New York Times’
publication of a cartoon straight out of Nazi propaganda ripped away the veil,”
said Tamar Sternthal, Director of CAMERA’s Israel office.
The New York
Times cartoon, which was published in April, exposed the increasing
prevalence of antisemitism in the mainstream media.
The cartoon depicted a
blind, kippah-wearingPresident Donald Trump being led by
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as his guide dog,
tagged with a Magen David. The cartoon caused a social media uproar after the
image was shown to mirror caricatures in Nazi publications of the 1930s and
40s.
“After the cartoon was
published, it was clear that even in The New York Times explicit,
blatant antisemitism can sneak its way into the mainstream news. This compelled
us to focus our event on mainstreaming of antisemitism,” added Sternthal, it’s
dressed up as mere criticism of Israeli policy.
Dan Diker, Director of the Project on Political
Warfare and BDS at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, acknowledged former
MK Anat Berko,an expert in counterterrorism and her husband Reuven, an
expert in Arab affairs, who along with historian Joel Fishman, were
helpful in his career development, and in the audience.
Diker spoke of the
German parliament’s recent resolution condemning BDS, Boycott, Divestment, and
Sanctions of Israel, as antisemitic. Diker noted that the only two groups
condemning the German parliament’s censure of BDS as antisemitic were Hamas and
240 Israeli and Jewish academics.
“It’s been said that you
can put lipstick on a pig, but it’s still a pig. When it comes to BDS, when
Jews put lipstick on a pig, it convinces the world that the pig is kosher,”
Diker stated.
Ricki Hollander, CAMERA senior media analyst, said that
journalists all too often use double standards or distort, conceal and revise
the facts in order to maintain a narrative of Israeli guilt.
“They’re not relaying
legitimate criticism of Israel. They are engaging in "Israelophobia"
that masquerades as criticism of Israel."
Hollander said that
there are other cultural factors that inform the media’s mainstreaming of
antisemitism. “Many journalists are now rooted in an educational culture ruled
by identity politics and partisan activism. And in the hierarchy of perceived
victimhood within this culture, Jews are not even ranked. They're erroneously
seen as white, privileged and powerful, on the other side of the divide.”
The antisemitic BDS
campaign is also growing on American campuses.
“Over the years,
Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) chapters across the US have shared
antisemitic literature, trying to hide it under the guise of anti-Zionism. But
their mistakes have, at times, revealed their true colors,” said Aviva
Rosenschein, International Campus Director for CAMERA.
While The New
York Times’ April cartoon used Nazi-like imagery, Rosenschein gave
examples of SJP chapters on American campuses that use actual Nazi imagery in
materials that are supposed to be mere criticism of Israel.
According to
Rosenschein, a collaboration between SJP and Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP),
another radical anti-Israel organization, is also fueling antisemitism on
campuses.
“Neither SJP nor JVP
represents mainstream Jews and yet both groups somehow think that they are in a
position to decide what constitutes discrimination and bigotry against Jews,”
Rosenschein remarked.
Unfortunately, the
antisemitic agenda of groups like SJP and JVP are often glossed over and
misunderstood by university administrations.
“The more chancellors,
administrators, university donors, faculty and students understand the real
goals of these extremist organizations, the more allies we will have to stand
up against their hate. We cannot expect the average American to know about these
difficult issues; we must be willing to educate others,” Rosenschein concluded.
The audience was given
an opportunity to pose questions to the panel at the conclusion of the prepared
presentations.
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