
The Sunday Times ‘crossed a red line,’ says Ambassador to UK Daniel Taub; Knesset Speaker Rivlin lodges complaint with British counterpart
Times of Israel
Israel is planning to demand an apology for a controversial cartoon that appeared in the British Sunday Times, Israel’s ambassador to London said Monday, while one minister mulled steps against the paper.
One day after the caricature sparked outrage among Jewish groups for its depiction of a bloodthirsty Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu building a wall with the blood and bodies of Palestinians, leading Israelis joined the chorus of condemnation.
“The newspaper should apologize for this. We’re not going to let this stand as it is,” Israeli Ambassador to London Daniel Taub told The Times of Israel in a telephone interview. “We genuinely think that a red line has been crossed and the obligation on the newspaper is to correct that.”
Taub added that he was going to meet with the newspaper’s editor “at the earliest opportunity, perhaps already today,” to express the government’s concern about a cartoon that draws “on classical anti-Semitic themes.”
In a meeting Monday with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Tony Blair, the representative of the Middle East quartet who’s also a former British premier, deplored the caricature, noting the timing of its publication on International Holocaust Remembrance Day, according to a press release from the Prime Minister’s Office.
Earlier on Monday, Public Diplomacy and Diaspora Affairs Minister Yuli Edelstein told Army Radio that the government would probably refrain from filing an official complaint with the London-based paper. However, he said, “We will think about how to act against the paper’s representative here in Israel.”
The cartoon is “certainly” anti-Semitic, Edelstein asserted. “I don’t think there is any other possible way to interpret it,” he said, adding that its publication on International Holocaust Remembrance Day was particularly hurtful, a sentiment shared by Taub.
Responding to an outcry from Jewish groups — Efraim Zuroff, director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Israel office, called the cartoon “absolutely disgusting” and said it “makes all the talk of fighting anti-Semitism seem irrelevant,” and Michael Salberg of the Anti-Defamation League said “The Sunday Times has clearly lost its moral bearings — a spokesman for the newspaper told The Times of Israel Sunday the cartoon was not anti-Semitic but critical of the prime minister’s policies, as it was “aimed squarely at Mr. Netanyahu and his policies, not at Israel, let alone at Jewish people.”
Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin wrote a letter Monday to his British counterpart, Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow, expressing the Israeli people’s “extreme outrage” at the cartoon, which was drawn by veteran caricaturist Gerald Scarfe.
“For me and for other Israelis, this cartoon was reminiscent of the vicious journalism during one of the darkest periods in human history,” Rivlin wrote. While government authorities should not attempt to control the media and must grant freedom of speech, many Israelis are “shocked that such cartoons can be published in such a respectable newspaper in the Great Britain of today, fearing that such an event is testimony to sick undercurrents in British society.”
Scarfe’s cartoon, captioned “Israeli elections: Will cementing peace continue?”, “blatantly crossed the line of freedom of expression,” Rivlin added.
Jewish Agency chairman Natan Sharansky drew a direct connection between the cartoon and the increase in anti-Semitic violence that took place in 2012.
“There is a very tragic alliance between primitive, anti-democratic, nationalist, racist, fundamentalist forces who are committing most of the violence, and enlightened, liberal, intellectual representatives of the intelligentsia in Europe,” Sharansky told The Times of Israel. By using clear double standards towards Israel, Western intellectuals evidently accept the delegitimization of Israel and are thus “helping to justify” anti-Jewish violence, he said. While Israel respects other nations’ right to freedom of speech, it is was “necessary and important” to label people such as Scarfe, the cartoonist, as anti-Semites, he added.
Some Israelis came to Scarfe’s defense. Haaretz correspondent Anshel Pfeffer listed several reasons the cartoon was “not anti-Semitic by any standard”: the cartoon, he argued, isn’t directed at Jews, features no Jewish symbols and does not use Holocaust imagery.
Rupert Murdoch, the billionaire CEO of News Corp., which owns The Times, nevertheless tweeted a harshly worded apology.
Gerald Scarfe has never reflected the opinions of the Sunday Times. Nevertheless, we owe major apology for grotesque, offensive cartoon.
Nissim “Nusko” Hezkiyahu, one of Israel’s most famous caricaturists, defended Scarfe. While Sunday’s cartoon turned his stomach, it is not anti-Semitic, Hezkiyahu told Army Radio. “You need to know this man. He wasn’t born yesterday nor did he start publishing caricatures yesterday,” Hezkiyahu said. “We’re talking about Gerald Scarfe, one of the world’s most famous caricaturists, who doesn’t just make fun of Bibi” but of many politicians, and he treats them all equally disrespectfully. “If you look at the other caricatures, Bibi came off easy.”
“To say that this caricature shows Bibi with a big nose — compared to all the caricatures that are published here, I think that was the smallest nose he ever had,” Hezkiyahu said.
The fact that the cartoon was published on a day on which the world remembers the Holocaust was unfortunate, but most likely not the fault of the cartoonist but of the editor, Hezkiyahu added.
Taub, Israel’s ambassador in London, acknowledged that Scarfe is famous for politically incorrect drawings but said that the depiction of Netanyahu went too far. “Scarfe is known to be provocative, but I think that even according to his own provocative standards, this is a cartoon that crosses any line,” Taub said. “What is very troubling is that fact that these are things that we have become accustomed to see only really only at the extreme end of society, the most extreme elements on the fringes. And to see them in a respected newspaper like the Sunday Times, which is really in the heart of mainstream, is very troubling indeed.”



















































#1 by Frank on January 29, 2013 - 3:59 pm
I hear Pamela Geller is so hurt by that cartoon she is putting up a new series of love and peace posters in the NYC subways
#2 by John Edward Kendrick on January 29, 2013 - 4:11 pm
Jews who have a problem with their depravity being exposed to the world and mirrored to them lack the capacity for self-reflection, lack ethics, and are unwilling to repent their evil ways.
Like pit bulls, these devils seem predisposed (hard-wired) to harm others without remorse and without conscience. They shoot the messenger rather than consider that their own way of being lies at the foundations of the criticisms leveled, rightfully, against them.
To label such criticisms as “anti-semitic” and expect this label to continue to serve to deflect scrutiny indicates a degree of stupidity that ‘the chosen’ would be embarrassed to realize if only they could truly see themselves as others see them.
#3 by annebeck58 on January 29, 2013 - 4:29 pm
Well, again; whaaaah.
Truth hurts, hey?
But, this?
However, he (Edelstein) said, “We will think about how to act against the paper’s representative here in Israel.”
What kind of threat is that? Are they planning on murdering another journalist, or what?
Still, the words of Hezkiyahu were pretty funny- “smallest nose (Bibi) ever had”. Haha. These people need to own what they do, and this includes Bibi and all of Israhell.
#4 by Steven on January 29, 2013 - 4:41 pm
I have seen the cartoon in question and in my opinion it fits and no apology is warranted.
What Israel needs instead of an apology is 100 trident 3 SLBMs each with 8 thermonuclear warheads launched at Israel with out warning and no apologies afterwards. Then send all the jews and their fellow travellers all around the world to Israel to be settlers. If after that they dare step out of line launch more nukes at Israel and bounce the rubble. Like Mark Glen says the pity party is over!
#5 by amerikagulag on January 29, 2013 - 4:54 pm
I suppose if Netanyahu were a semite, he’d have something to squawk about, but he’s NOT semite and neither are most of the people currently squatting in the land formerly known as Palestine.
#6 by Average Joe Bodybuilder on January 29, 2013 - 5:30 pm
Here’s your apology BB:
#7 by owainglyndwr1416 on January 29, 2013 - 5:34 pm
Problem Steven .. The Nuclear Weapons Israel has targeting every major City on the planet have doomsday timers which are counting down right now and have to be reset by codes and are tamper proof.. If Israel is taken out the rest of will be taken down with them unless someone is able to retrieve the codes before launching an attack.
#8 by Sam Cash. on January 29, 2013 - 5:48 pm
Zionist Murdoch will be a bit pissed off with the cartoonist.As for Zionist Puppet Blair,he should be hung from the nearest lamppost with his ugly wife cherrie.
#9 by Ingrid B on January 29, 2013 - 7:03 pm
@John Edward Kendrick, in the words of the Scottish bard, Robert Burns :
But that god the gift would gie them,
To see themselves as others see them..
#10 by KPRyan on January 29, 2013 - 8:12 pm
I thought only Muslims were supposed to endure offensive cartoons.
#11 by Gavin on January 29, 2013 - 8:19 pm
Truth is the Jews’ Kryptonite. They hate the truth because it is not kind to them. Just goes to show what hypocritical, equivocal, narcissistic, psychopathic people they are. Israel did 9-11; what else is there to say. They are the scum of the earth. Too bad there really wasn’t a Holocaust.
#12 by Ryan on January 29, 2013 - 8:30 pm
Yes, amazing, on Friday UK LibDem MP got slammed for saying “the jews” in relation to israels treatment of Palestinians with jewish groups saying ‘no,no, its not all jews, its the israeli government’. Yet this cartoon only depicts netanyahoo, not “all jews”, and it gets labelled anti semitic! can anyone notice the hypocrisy here?;-)
#13 by Ryan on January 29, 2013 - 8:32 pm
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013/01/28/bradford-east-libdem-mp-d_n_2569204.html?utm_hp_ref=uk-politics?ncid=GEP
#14 by Blake on January 29, 2013 - 8:53 pm
Yawn. The truth is anti semitic.
#15 by Ryan on January 29, 2013 - 8:54 pm
I apologise in advance. This is Britains pamela gellar;-) http://melaniephillips.com/britains-infernal-cocktail-of-hate
#16 by nooralhaqiqa on January 29, 2013 - 9:28 pm
That toon is nothing to the one of Ariel Sharon, man of peace, eating babies that was out years ago. Guess they squawked then too. Interesting…. seems to be a pattern of destruction in those toons…. overactive imagination on the behalf of the cartoonists. Heck…. sic the IDF on them!
There is only one freedom of speech… and that is the Jewish version. The sooner you goyim figure this out, the better off you will be.
Well done Mr. Scarfe! Better watch your back though… and please do not apologize for the truth.
#17 by Dr. Ho on January 29, 2013 - 9:34 pm
No one is allowed to criticize the Jews on holocaust year!
It “makes all the talk of fighting anti-Semitism seem irrelevant,” go figure.
Oh! It’s a double standard! No! It’s a damned apartheid wall built on stolen land!
#18 by amerikagulag on January 29, 2013 - 10:48 pm
How ironic! Netanyahu is NOT SEMITIC. and the holocaust is a HOAX. Is the universe bitch slapping these parasites? LOL
#19 by John Edward Kendrick on January 29, 2013 - 10:54 pm
Too much knowledge is anti-semitic.
Thanks, Ingrid, for the Robert Burns source to this phrase I do remember in old Irish brogue(?) and have often quoted without recalling the source.
#20 by Pro-Gentile on January 29, 2013 - 11:23 pm
@Ryan -
I went ahead and left her a message… no not a nasty one. Just some questions, and truths. I would suggest that everyone leave “Britians Pamela Gellar” a message as well.
http://melaniephillips.com/britains-infernal-cocktail-of-hate
I guess it is only Jews you can’t make fun of…. how sweet, “Freedom of Speech” – but only if you’re a Jew.
#21 by annebeck58 on January 29, 2013 - 11:24 pm
Haha.
This post has the best comments, ever!
Bibi is ALL Jews, by the way; don’t ya know? Surely, he thinks so.
#22 by annebeck58 on January 29, 2013 - 11:34 pm
Just went there.
This Melanie is saying the cartoon can be published, at all, because “Anti-Semitism” is find in GB? What is she, stupid (most likely)? Or, does she believe her readers are stupid (probably)? Now that France is unable to view negative commentary online re: Israhell, I am sure GB will be next. And who knows; the US may fall in line, too.
I am so sick of them.
The one positive thing about this England-Gellar’s blog is this: No pictures of her, unlike the snake-woman, who seems to have lost her eyesight or has no mirrors in her home. I mean; who’d allow pictures of herself (that ugly) to be posted all over the place? Yikes.
#23 by annebeck58 on January 29, 2013 - 11:34 pm
*I really need to start reading my comments before I hit, post.
Excuse my typos (again). Fine is the word..
#24 by Masoud Al Habsi - Middle East on January 29, 2013 - 11:47 pm
Anti Semitism (and all other deceptive vocabulary designed to frame and limit all level of intellectual inquiry) is an article of faith in the Secular State of Israel. So when these people accuse you of Anti Semitism, they are not pretending, they Really mean it – that’s the Real Issue.
Not all Jews in Palestine are non Semite, most of them are not, but a tiny number are semite like the Mizrahi. But Mr. Netanyahu is Sephardic.
Remember these people do not understand Goy language, their language is opposite to ours: Deception, like the Wall of Hate in Palestine is there to contain those ‘Few’ people who wish to escape their Hate. Therefore nuking the whole place is not the way to go but unfortunately the only Goy language these people understand is that of Real Fire.
#25 by Steven on January 30, 2013 - 1:59 am
Regarding comment number seven I don’t think that problem is justification for showing quarter to Israel or Jews. Infact it is absolute justification for destroying their power from off the face of the earth so that future generations are not plagued by them and their politically correct criminal activity.
Submitting to nuclear black mail is unacceptable under all circumstances.
#26 by Mazdy on January 30, 2013 - 2:06 am
Cry baby jews going at it like always. The world is so bass ackwards
#27 by Dr. Ho on January 30, 2013 - 3:47 pm
When is the Iraqi genocide remembrance day?
Why aren’t Palestinians allowed to gather on Naqba remembrance day?
Why are Jews so often hypocrites? Is their identity by definition, supremacist?