Post by Teddy Bear on Feb 11, 2011 18:52:02 GMT
With most of the recent world focus on the political upheavals in the Arab world, the BBC have been feeling 'withdrawal symptoms' not to have anything to demonize Israel about. Fortunately for them, a German photographer with a clear anti-Israel agenda is having an exhibition of his photographs taken after the Israeli incursion into Gaza showing the 'innocent' Palestinian victims.
Notice how he attempts to 'laugh it off' (with a rather stupid smirky grin) when the journalist puts the comment that he has been called anti-Semitic. He responds to the effect that these are simply photographs . If the journalist was unbiased they could retort that what makes him anti-Semitic is his photographs don't show Hamas firing rockets in civilian areas towards Israel, making the conflict and resulting civilian casualties inevitable.
This is probably how BBC journalists manage to convince themselves they are similarly not anti-Semitic. After all they are also reporting 'truth', so long as you don't count the unbalanced and distorted version as a lie.
Robin Shepherd comments on this BBC 'event'.
Notice how he attempts to 'laugh it off' (with a rather stupid smirky grin) when the journalist puts the comment that he has been called anti-Semitic. He responds to the effect that these are simply photographs . If the journalist was unbiased they could retort that what makes him anti-Semitic is his photographs don't show Hamas firing rockets in civilian areas towards Israel, making the conflict and resulting civilian casualties inevitable.
This is probably how BBC journalists manage to convince themselves they are similarly not anti-Semitic. After all they are also reporting 'truth', so long as you don't count the unbalanced and distorted version as a lie.
Robin Shepherd comments on this BBC 'event'.
BBC highlights exhibition of Israeli “war crimes” in Gaza by German photographer who uses Nazi analogies with Israel
As a leading player in the global deligitimisation campaign, it is never a surprise when the BBC lashes out against the Jewish state. Sometimes, though, the presence of an agenda against Israel is more blatant than other times. So it is with a video segment about an exhibition of photos in London by German photographer Kai Wiedenhofer on the aftermath of Israel’s war with Hamas in December 2008 and January 2009.
Wiedenhofer has lived among the Palestinians for years. He is effectively an anti-Zionist campaigner. He has drawn on Nazi imagery, implied parallels between the Star of David and the Swastika, captioned photos with words such as “ghetto” creating a comparison with the Warsaw Ghetto in 1943, and promoted the notion of Israeli “apartheid”. Speaking about Wiedenhofer’s photos of the security barrier, Levi Salomon, of the Jewish Forum for Democracy and Against anti-Semitism, an initiative of the 12,000-member Berlin Jewish community, told the Jerusalem Post in 2008: “In the motifs he chooses for his photos, Wiedenhofer’s political views become clear. In his work, he presents a completely distorted, one-sided image of the Israeli security installation.”
Basic journalistic ethics would clearly lead any normal media outlet to relate such information to the reader or viewer since informing ones audience about the credibility of the source is a central element of the journalistic enterprise. The BBC, of course, tells you nothing about him leaving the impression he is just an everyday photographer innocently doing his job. The reporter, Anna Macnamee, relates the fact that he has been accused of anti-Semitism only to allow Wiedenhofer casually to dismiss it:
“Oh,” he laughs” What is anti-Semitic photography? This is also a term that doesn’t exist.” All he did was take pictures of what the Israeli army destroyed, he says as the camera shifts to yet another photo of a maimed civilian woman. His previous comparisons with Nazi Germany — all such comparisons are considered anti-Semitic by the EU’s monitoring organisation on racism — are not thrown back at him. His denial is allowed to stand without a shred of the evidence being presented to the audience.
The piece is then wrapped up with references to none other than the Goldtsone report which, our reporter tells us, accused both sides of committing war crimes “and that Israel had used disproportionate force deliberately targeting civilians.”
This is not journalism, it is political propaganda of the most blatant kind. I wonder what anyone is going to do about it?
As a leading player in the global deligitimisation campaign, it is never a surprise when the BBC lashes out against the Jewish state. Sometimes, though, the presence of an agenda against Israel is more blatant than other times. So it is with a video segment about an exhibition of photos in London by German photographer Kai Wiedenhofer on the aftermath of Israel’s war with Hamas in December 2008 and January 2009.
Wiedenhofer has lived among the Palestinians for years. He is effectively an anti-Zionist campaigner. He has drawn on Nazi imagery, implied parallels between the Star of David and the Swastika, captioned photos with words such as “ghetto” creating a comparison with the Warsaw Ghetto in 1943, and promoted the notion of Israeli “apartheid”. Speaking about Wiedenhofer’s photos of the security barrier, Levi Salomon, of the Jewish Forum for Democracy and Against anti-Semitism, an initiative of the 12,000-member Berlin Jewish community, told the Jerusalem Post in 2008: “In the motifs he chooses for his photos, Wiedenhofer’s political views become clear. In his work, he presents a completely distorted, one-sided image of the Israeli security installation.”
Basic journalistic ethics would clearly lead any normal media outlet to relate such information to the reader or viewer since informing ones audience about the credibility of the source is a central element of the journalistic enterprise. The BBC, of course, tells you nothing about him leaving the impression he is just an everyday photographer innocently doing his job. The reporter, Anna Macnamee, relates the fact that he has been accused of anti-Semitism only to allow Wiedenhofer casually to dismiss it:
“Oh,” he laughs” What is anti-Semitic photography? This is also a term that doesn’t exist.” All he did was take pictures of what the Israeli army destroyed, he says as the camera shifts to yet another photo of a maimed civilian woman. His previous comparisons with Nazi Germany — all such comparisons are considered anti-Semitic by the EU’s monitoring organisation on racism — are not thrown back at him. His denial is allowed to stand without a shred of the evidence being presented to the audience.
The piece is then wrapped up with references to none other than the Goldtsone report which, our reporter tells us, accused both sides of committing war crimes “and that Israel had used disproportionate force deliberately targeting civilians.”
This is not journalism, it is political propaganda of the most blatant kind. I wonder what anyone is going to do about it?