* Daily Mail columnist Melanie Phillips, in today’s edition of the Spectator magazine (the leading news and comment weekly):
“One might have expected such a momentous ruling pronouncing Le Monde guilty of racial prejudice against the Jews to have made waves. Not a bit of it. The French have ignored it. The case was only brought to light by the Middle East commentator Tom Gross in the Wall Street Journal Europe, who asked why nothing had been written about it anywhere a week after the ruling. Following his article, the Guardian belatedly ran a story.
... The media has been silent because the same kind of calumnies are routinely published and broadcast throughout Europe... the media refuse to [open up the debate over their coverage of] Israel because the prejudice is omnipresent. This is why ‘blogs’ website comment spots are becoming increasingly important to bust the monopoly of the mainstream media and subject its bias and prejudice on any subject to systematic exposure, deconstruction and opprobrium...”
CONTENTS
1. “The law can’t stop hate” (By Melanie Phillips, The Spectator, June 11, 2005)
2. “French journalists stiff Hezbollah” (Jewish Telegraph Agency, June 9, 2005)
3. “‘French anti-Semitism up’” (By Sefi Hendler, Ynetnews, June 6, 2005)
4. “‘Jews have too much power’” (Ynetnews, June 7, 2005)
LE MONDE: UPDATE SINCE LAST WEEK
With such a large number of journalists worldwide subscribing to this list, it is not surprising that items included on it frequently generate considerable follow-up media coverage. I don’t usually mention the full extent to which notes, commentaries and items on this list are subsequently used by other media, both in print and online.
But on this occasion I will. One of the reasons I wrote the op-ed piece (“J’accuse”) in The Wall Street Journal Europe last Thursday (and then sent it out on this list on Friday) is because a week had gone by since the landmark French court judgment, and not a single newspaper in the world (other than Le Monde itself, where there was a brief report) had even mentioned it.
NEWS MEDIA
I am glad to report that the article has had the desired effect. It has led newspapers such as The Guardian (UK), Ha’aretz (Israel), The Jerusalem Post, The Washington Times, and The Mail & Guardian (South Africa) to report on the judgment against Le Monde.
NEWS AGENCIES
“J’accuse” has led at least one international news agency (UPI) to report on the judgment leading it in turn to be reported in news media as far afield as India.
WEBLOGS
“J’accuse” has been reprinted or discussed in several hundred weblogs and web lists worldwide (often accompanied by extensive readers’ discussions). These include leading sites and lists such as Little Green Footballs, Free Republic, PowerLine, EuReferendum, Naomi Ragen, David P. Steinmann, Murray Kahl, Steven Plaut, Jewish World Review, Stand With Us, the website of American TV host Charlie Rose, and so on.
THINK TANKS
Prominent American think tanks and publications, such as the Foundation For the Defense of Democracies and the American Thinker have reproduced “J’accuse”.
EUROPEAN WEBSITES
In addition to websites in South America, Australia, the U.S. and Canada, a gratifying number of sites where “J’Accuse” has been reprinted and discussed are in Europe. These include sites in France, Germany, Austria, Holland, Italy, Britain and Switzerland.
IN FRENCH
Since their own media is doing its very best to avoid mentioning the court judgment, I am particularly heartened that dozens of French-language weblogs are discussing the article and quite a number have translated “J’accuse” and reproduced it in full. French subscribers to this email list who would like to read it in French can now do so at around 20 websites, for example, at www.objectif-info.com/Antisem_france/j_accuse.htm.
CHRISTIAN SITES
Following “J’accuse,” websites of several Christian organizations (both Catholic and Protestant), as well as the religion news page of the BBC website have now mentioned the Le Monde judgment.
MEDIA WATCHDOGS
Prompted by my article, media watchdog organizations such as “HonestReporting,” “Camera,” and “Eye on the (Washington) Post” have now reported on the judgment against Le Monde.
See, for example, the follow-up comments and analysis at these leading media watchdogs:
(1) www.honestreporting.com/articles/45884734/reports/AntiSemitism_at_Le_Monde_and_Beyond.asp
(2) www.honestreporting.com/articles/45884734/critiques/Silence_on_French_Court_Ruling.asp
(3) www.eyeonthepost.org/
PHOTOS
Interesting photos accompanying “J’accuse” can be seen at many websites, for example, at
(1) http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2005/06/jaccuse.html
and (2) http://wanderingjew.typepad.com/ (June 6 entry).
* * *
I attach four articles below, with summaries first. One concerns a poll, which shows many Europeans believe Jews have too much power a classic anti-Semitic belief also prevalent in Europe and the U.S. both before and during the Holocaust.
-- Tom Gross
SUMMARIES
THE LAW CAN’T STOP HATE
“The law can’t stop hate” (By Melanie Phillips, The Spectator, June 11, 2005)
Since the intensification of the Palestinian jihad five years ago, Britain and Europe have been convulsed by an eruption of virulent anti-Jewish hatred based on the systematic lies, libels and demonisation directed at Israel by the media and intelligentsia.
... Now, however, agreement that hatred of Jews is indeed umbilically linked to the current attack upon Israel has emerged from a most unlikely quarter. In France, everyday violence and intimidation has left French Jews in a state of siege.
Yet two weeks ago the French appeal court in Versailles ruled that in a comment piece published by Le Monde in 2002 entitled ‘Israel-Palestine: the Cancer’, the paper was guilty of ‘racial defamation’ against the Jewish people. In other words, under cover of an attack upon Israel in language which is replicated every week in Britain and Europe, the most prestigious newspaper in France had been whipping up hatred of the Jews.
... Le Monde, which is now appealing to the highest court in France, merely sniffs in lofty disdain. The ruling took these remarks out of context, said one of the paper’s lawyers; of course these authors were not anti-Jewish. Some of their meilleurs amis, no doubt, are Jews.
... heartening as it is to see a public body at last calling this prejudice by its proper name, the case against Le Monde also provokes unease. hatred and prejudice are subjective concepts and so can easily be used to suppress legitimate expression.
... The way to deal with prejudice is surely through the public pillory, naming and shaming and countering it with the truth. In other words, far from suppressing expression the remedy is to open up debate. The problem, though, is that the media refuse to do this over Israel...
“IT’S SCANDALOUS, IT’S SHAMEFUL!”
“French journalists stiff Hezbollah” (Jewish Telegraph Agency, June 9, 2005)
Several French journalists stalked out of a Paris news conference when a Hezbollah official refused to answer a question from an Israeli reporter...
... On her way out, a French journalist chastised those who remained behind, “He refuses to respond to a Jewish Israeli journalist and you stay! It’s scandalous, it’s shameful!”
“VERY PREVALENT”
“‘French anti-Semitism up’” (By Sefi Hendler, Ynetnews, June 6, 2005)
An overwhelming majority of French survey respondents admitted anti-Semitism is a common, growing phenomenon in the country, newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported Monday...
About 70 percent of survey respondents admitted anti-Semitism is either a “very prevalent” or “relatively prevalent” phenomenon in their country, marking a dramatic increase from previous polls in the ‘80s and ’90s, when “only” about 50 percent of respondents expressed similar views
only 22 percent of respondents said anti-Semitism is rare in France...
BLAIMING JEWS FOR THE DEATH OF JESUS
“‘Jews have too much power’” (By Ynetnews, June 7, 2005)
A plurality of Europeans believes Jews are not loyal to their country and that they have too much power in business and finance, a new poll released by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) showed.
According to the poll, 43 percent believe Jews are more loyal to Israel than to their own country, with a majority of respondents in Italy, Germany, Poland and Spain saying they believe that this statement is “probably true.”
... The poll [of 6,000 adults 500 in each of the 12 European countries] also showed that large portions of the European public continue to believe that Jews still talk too much about what happened to them in the Holocaust.
... 20 percent of those surveyed across Europe continue to blame Jews for the death of Jesus
THE LAW CAN’T STOP HATE
The law can’t stop hate
By Melanie Phillips
The Spectator (London)
June 11, 2005
www.spectator.co.uk/article.php?id=6227&issue=2005-06-11
www.spectator.co.uk/article.php?id=6227&page=2
Since the intensification of the Palestinian jihad five years ago, Britain and Europe have been convulsed by an eruption of virulent anti-Jewish hatred based on the systematic lies, libels and demonisation directed at Israel by the media and intelligentsia.
Still reading? Well done. Others will no doubt already have thrown this article across the room in disgust. For conventional wisdom has it that there has been no upsurge of anti-Jewish hatred, only legitimate attacks on Israel which are being labelled anti-Jewish prejudice by those who are either suffering from advanced paranoia or are Zionist zealots attempting to sanitise the crimes of Ariel Sharon.
Now, however, agreement that hatred of Jews is indeed umbilically linked to the current attack upon Israel has emerged from a most unlikely quarter. In France, everyday violence and intimidation has left French Jews in a state of siege.
Yet two weeks ago the French appeal court in Versailles ruled that in a comment piece published by Le Monde in 2002 entitled ‘Israel-Palestine: the Cancer’, the paper was guilty of ‘racial defamation’ against the Jewish people. In other words, under cover of an attack upon Israel in language which is replicated every week in Britain and Europe, the most prestigious newspaper in France had been whipping up hatred of the Jews.
The appeal court ruled that the article, written by a well-known sociologist, a university lecturer and a member of the European Parliament, contained comments that ‘targeted a whole nation, or a religious group in its quasi-globality’.
The article was the usual farrago of untruths, libels and distortions about Israel. It described it as ‘oppressing and asphyxiating the Palestinian population’, repeated the lie about the massacre of Jenin that never was, and claimed that Israel was imposing apartheid beneath the shroud of the Holocaust. In particular, the court singled out two paragraphs which explicitly defamed the Jewish people as a whole:
‘It is hard to imagine that a nation of fugitives born of a people who have been subjected to the longest persecution in the history of humanity... should be capable, in the space of two generations, of transforming themselves into a people sure of themselves and dominating (of others) and, with the exception of an admirable minority, a scornful people that takes satisfaction in humiliating others...
‘The Jews of Israel, descended of an apartheid [sic] named the ghetto, are ghettoising the Palestinians. The Jews, who were the victims of a pitiless order, are imposing their pitiless order on the Palestinians. The Jewish victims of inhumanity are displaying a terrible inhumanity. The Jews, scapegoats for every evil, are “scapegoating” Arafat and the Palestinian Authority, made responsible for attacks that they prevent them from preventing.’
Le Monde, which is now appealing to the highest court in France, merely sniffs in lofty disdain. The ruling took these remarks out of context, said one of the paper’s lawyers; of course these authors were not anti-Jewish. Some of their meilleurs amis, no doubt, are Jews.
In fact, these two paragraphs provided the rhetorical climax to the article’s group libel against Israel and thus explicitly associated what it so delightfully called ‘the chosen people’ with ‘plunder, gratuitous destruction, homicides, executions’.
One might have expected such a momentous ruling pronouncing Le Monde guilty of racial prejudice against the Jews to have made waves. Not a bit of it. The French have ignored it. The case was only brought to light by the Middle East commentator Tom Gross in the Wall Street Journal Europe, who asked why nothing had been written about it anywhere a week after the ruling. Following his article, the Guardian belatedly ran a story.
The media has been silent because the same kind of calumnies are routinely published and broadcast in Britain and throughout Europe: obsessively disproportionate and libellous coverage which equates Israel with the Nazis, misrepresents its defence against terror as brutal aggression, and singles out the Jewish people in their ancient and restored nation state as uniquely unworthy of self-determination.
So should those who are deeply concerned by the rise in prejudice and violence towards Jews provoked by this perversity be able to take similar action? In Britain, only individuals, not peoples or nations, can seek the civil redress provided by the libel laws. So should we too have a crime of racial defamation?
Well, no. For heartening as it is to see a public body at last calling this prejudice by its proper name, the case against Le Monde also provokes unease. Racial prejudice is hateful and should be exposed as such. But this should be done at the bar of public opinion, not in a court of law.
It was only through a procedural quirk of this particular case that Le Monde was required merely to pay notional damages; since racial defamation is a crime, its editor and writers could have gone to prison. It is surely oppressive to jail anyone for their opinion. The courts are a blunt instrument, and using them to suppress free speech is deeply troubling. Our draconian libel laws already stifle much necessary expression, and anti-discrimination laws are in danger of demonising half the population for being either racists or every kind of phobe.
Incitement to violence is a crime that should be prosecuted. But hatred and prejudice are subjective concepts and so can easily be used to suppress legitimate expression.
We already have a law against incitement to racial hatred, and the government proposes to introduce a new crime of incitement to religious hatred. The latter will criminalise legitimate and necessary criticism of religion, while the former is so problematic that it is scarcely used. If political views that promote anti-Jewish or other racist hatred were banned, so too must all literary anti-Jewish and racist stereotypes be banned, which would mean censoring much of English literature, not to mention the New Testament and the Koran. What is hateful and prejudiced to one person may be legitimate comment to another. The way to deal with prejudice is surely through the public pillory, naming and shaming and countering it with the truth. In other words, far from suppressing expression the remedy is to open up debate.
The problem, though, is that the media refuse to do this over Israel because the prejudice is omnipresent. This is why ‘blogs’ website comment spots are becoming increasingly important to bust the monopoly of the mainstream media and subject its bias and prejudice on any subject to systematic exposure, deconstruction and opprobrium.
Racist expression poses an acute dilemma for a liberal society. Its effects are noxious; its antidotes may be muted. But suppressing it just drives it underground. If hearts and minds are to be won, prejudice has to be fought in the open on the battlefield of ideas.
(Melanie Phillips is a Daily Mail columnist.)
FRENCH JOURNALISTS STIFF HEZBOLLAH
French journalists stiff Hezbollah
Jewish Telegraph Agency
June 9, 2005
Several French journalists stalked out of a Paris news conference when a Hezbollah official refused to answer a question from an Israeli reporter.
Sety Hendler, who writes for Yediot Achronot, asked Ali Daamouch, Hezbollah’s head of exterior relations, about the status of prisoner-exchange talks with Israel. Daamouch asked Hendler his nationality, and upon hearing that he was Israeli, refused to respond to the question. Hendler left the room in protest, and several other reporters joined him in solidarity.
On her way out, a French journalist chastised those who remained behind, “He refuses to respond to a Jewish Israeli journalist and you stay! It’s scandalous, it’s shameful!”
A non-Israeli journalist repeated the question and received a vague response from Daamouch.
“FRENCH ANTI-SEMITISM UP”
‘French anti-Semitism up’
Comprehensive survey undertaken in France shows an overwhelming majority admits anti-Semitism is a common phenomenon in the country; meanwhile, 76 percent say Jew-hatred on the rise
By Sefi Hendler
Ynetnews
June 6, 2005
www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3095493,00.html
An overwhelming majority of French survey respondents admitted anti-Semitism is a common, growing phenomenon in the country, newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported Monday.
The disturbing survey is to be presented to France’s newly appointed Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin.
The poll, comprised of 1,000 respondents, was commissioned by the Friends of Tel Aviv University in France. The results will be presented at the group’s annual luncheon at the Sorbonne, with De Villepan.
The French leader, who has already been briefed on the poll, is expected to deliver a speech on the problem of anti-Semitism and the ways of dealing with it.
About 70 percent of survey respondents admitted anti-Semitism is a either a “very prevalent” or “relatively prevalent” phenomenon in their country, marking a dramatic increase from previous polls in the ‘80s and ’90s, when “only” about 50 percent of respondents expressed similar views.
Meanwhile, only 22 percent of respondents said anti-Semitism is rare in France.
On another front, 76 percent said anti-Semitism has increased, while only 8 percent said the phenomenon is on the decline.
Regarding “classic” anti-Semitic attitudes, 16 percent of respondents said French Jews have too much power, while 67 percent said they did not. However, 17 percent did not express an opinion on the matter.
The poll has some encouraging news, however. Only 9 percent of respondents said they would object to their children marrying Jews, compared to 37 percent who expressed a similar attitude in the ‘60s. Also, 17 percent said they would object to a Jewish president, compared to 50 percent who said the same in the ‘60s.
On another front, 26 percent of survey respondents said Jews have a “special attitude” to money, but only 4 percent said they would avoid any contact with a person just because he or she were Jewish
“JEWS HAVE TOO MUCH POWER”
‘Jews have too much power’
Anti-Defamation League survey shows plurality of Europeans believes Jews are not loyal to their country, have too much power in business and finance; 20 percent of those surveyed across Europe continue to blame Jews for death of Jesus
By Ynetnews
June 7, 2005
www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3096220,00.html
A plurality of Europeans believes Jews are not loyal to their country and that they have too much power in business and finance, a new poll released by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) Tuesday showed.
According to the poll, 43 percent believe Jews are more loyal to Israel than to their own country, with a majority of respondents in Italy, Germany, Poland and Spain saying they believe that this statement is “probably true.”
Alarmingly high levels of those surveyed across Europe still believe in the traditional anti-Jewish canard that “Jews have too much power in the business world.” Overall, nearly 30 percent of all respondents believe this stereotype to be true.
Similarly, European respondents still adhere to the notion that “Jews have too much power in international financial markets.” Overall, 32 percent of those surveyed cling to the traditional stereotype.
The countries surveyed were: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Italy, Germany, The Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and for the first time, Hungary and Poland.
The opinion survey of 6,000 adults 500 in each of the 12 European countries found either minimal decline, no change or, in some cases, an increase in negative attitudes toward Jews from its 2004 findings.
The poll also showed that large portions of the European public continue to believe that Jews still talk too much about what happened to them in the Holocaust.
Overall, 42 percent of those surveyed believe it is “probably true.” In fact, a plurality of respondents in Austria, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Spain and Switzerland believes this notion to be true.
Overall, 20 percent of those surveyed across Europe continue to blame Jews for the death of Jesus, and 29 percent said their opinion of Jews is influenced by the actions taken by the State of Israel.
Of those respondents whose opinions are influenced, a majority, 53 percent, said their opinion of Jews is worse as a result of the actions taken by Israel.
“The findings of this survey demonstrate that individual governments, the EU and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) who have condemned anti-Semitism and sought ways to counteract it, are being challenged to find a formula that will break down the old stereotypes that die hard,” ADL National Director Abraham H. Foxman said.
“Millions of Europeans still accept a wide range of traditional anti-Semitic stereotypes, including the charge that Jews are more loyal to Israel than to their home country. These attitudes help incite and legitimize anti-Semitism and, coupled with an atmosphere where violence against Jews is still prevalent, give us great cause for concern.”