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Sunday Apr 06, 2008
In the Trenches: What happens when the shoe's on the other foot? Posted by David Harris
Comments: 18
A small but influential chorus of American voices has made a mantra out of the notion that criticism of Israel is stifled by the pro-Israel community. Indeed, when NYU professor Tony Judt's lecture at the Polish Consulate in New York was canceled in 2006 by the consul general, because Poland did not subscribe to Judt's view of a one-state solution for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a group of intellectuals rushed to his defense. In a widely-publicized petition, they asserted that "We are united in believing that a climate of intimidation is inconsistent with fundamental principles of debate in a democracy. The Polish Consulate is not obliged to promote free speech. But the rules of the game in America oblige citizens to encourage rather than stifle debate." Let's set aside the absurdity of the entire effort. After all, Judt had given countless lectures before that October date, not to mention his articles on the subject in the New York Review of Books and elsewhere. None of his defenders could cite a second instance of "intimidation," nor, for that matter, would they be able to cite an instance since then, either. In fact, Judt's meeting was moved to a different venue in New York and that was that. But there's another side to the coin. While Judt and his erstwhile supporters, joined by Jimmy Carter, Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer, have been making their case about their inability to be heard - ironically, in think tanks, universities and media outlets only too happy to have them speak out about how they cannot speak out - some are trying to silence a very different viewpoint. On behalf of AJC, I do a weekly national 60-second radio spot. The time is purchased as any advertisement would be. For the past nearly seven years, it has been broadcast across the United States on the CBS radio network, on hundreds of stations, without incident. Earlier this year, we expanded the reach by adding in the New York area WQXR, a popular classical music station owned by the New York Times. For the week of March 31, here was the text to be aired: Fifteen seconds. Imagine you had fifteen seconds to find shelter from an incoming missile. Fifteen seconds to locate your children, help an elderly relative, assist a disabled person to find shelter. That's all the residents of Sderot and neighboring Israeli towns have. Day or night, the sirens go on. Fifteen seconds later, the missiles, fired from Hamas-controlled Gaza, hit. They could hit a home, a school, a hospital. Their aim is to kill and wound and demoralize. Imagine yourself in that situation. The sirens blast. 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. The time to seek shelter has ended. The missiles hit. This is what Israelis experience daily. But, amazingly, they refuse to be cowed. Help us help those Israelis. Visit ajc.org. The spot was broadcast several times, as is customary, on the CBS radio network, but WQXR refused to do so. Here's the written explanation from Tom Bartunek, president of New York Times Radio and general manager of WQXR: "In my judgement several elements of this spot are outside our bounds of acceptability. First, the opening line - 'Imagine you had fifteen seconds to find shelter from an oncoming missile' - does not make clear that the potential target of the missile is not our listening area, and as a consequence, runs the risk of raising anxiety in a misleading way. Second, the description of the missiles as arriving 'day or night' and 'daily' is also subject to challenge as being misleading, at least to the degree that reasonable people might be troubled by the absence of any acknowledgement of reciprocal Israeli military actions. Finally, in my judgement the 'countdown' device and the general tone of the message do not meet our guidelines for decorum." Stunning, above all, is the reference to "the absence of any acknowledgement of reciprocal Israeli military actions." In other words, according to Bartunek's logic, the only way to broadcast the plight of Sderot's residents over the airwaves is to equate Israel's right of self-defense with Hamas's and Islamic Jihads right to strike Israel at will. Notice I didn't say "day or night" or "daily" this time, because that might be construed as "misleading." Next time I'm in Sderot, I'll be sure to let its residents know they have less to worry about than they thought because, according to some in the United States, their attackers keep banker's hours. Meanwhile, Bartunek ought to read about the situation in Sderot in the April 5 front-page article in the paper that owns his station. In a subsequent phone conversation with one of my AJC colleagues, Bartunek went further. He explained that the radio station does not run ads with sirens or gun shots, neither of which was included in our spots, nor does it carry spots about "hemorrhoid cream or sexual potency pills." Well, that certainly helps clarify matters about rejecting a spot that sought to draw attention to innocent people under rocket attack who might need understanding and support. I can only imagine what would have been the response had we done a spot during the London blitz. Would it have been turned down as well, perhaps on the grounds that we failed to refer to reciprocal British military actions against Nazi Germany? Lest anyone think this was an isolated incident, a similar incident occurred with the same station in 2001, leading us to cancel our contract. We had resumed years later in the mistaken belief that things would be different. Heres the 2001 text: No one is born hating, but too many are taught to hate. One thing we've learned since September 11th is that in some unexpected places, children are taught to hate us. Recently, The New York Times (October 19, 2001) reported that in Saudi Arabia, tenth graders are warned of "the dangers of having Christian and Jewish friends," and in Pakistan, a million children attending religious schools are taught to "distrust and even hate the United States." (October 14, 2001) Our planet is increasingly crowded - six billion people practicing hundreds of faiths and identifying with countless ethnic backgrounds. Either we all learn to respect one another, or else we'll be doomed to more deadly acts inspired by blind hatred. Our government needs to begin addressing this pressing challenge abroad, starting with those nations ostensibly close to our own. Meanwhile, here at home, let's continue to show the world what mutual respect and understanding are really all about. At the time, two months after the September 11th attacks, the WQXR station manager cited the third paragraph as particularly objectionable. When we noted that the quotes were taken from the New York Times - again, the newspaper which owns the radio station - we were told that the language did not meet the station's standards. And, yes, we were lumped in then, too, with hemorrhoids. The suppressing of our message doesn't end with the New York Times-owned station. A week before the most recent incident with WQXR, I recorded another spot. It ran without any problem on CBS nationwide and, interestingly, WQXR broadcast it as well. But this time Bloomberg radio, a financial news station in New York, refused. AJC began airing the weekly spots on Bloomberg in January. (By the way, though the station carries his name, I am certain that Mayor Michael Bloomberg was unaware of the decision made by station officials.) Here's the full message: No one is born hating. Children are taught to hate. AJC has sponsored studies of textbooks in Egypt, Iran, and Saudi Arabia. In Saudi Arabia, for example, children are taught to hate people of other faiths. This teaching, we found, permeates the schools. Now we've released a study on Palestinian textbooks. Once again, the picture isn't pretty. The textbooks largely fail to recognize Israel. Israeli cities are described as Palestinian. Jewish holy places are presented as Muslim holy places taken over by the Jews - odd, considering that Judaism preceded Islam by more than 1,500 years. As early as the seventh grade, Palestinian children are taught to demonize the 'other,' meaning the Jew. And no, there's no comparable negative teaching in Israeli schools about Arab or Islamic societies. For those who pray for peace, it begins with children. They should be taught respect for others, not contempt. That's how peace begins. Everything written in this spot was verifiable. It was drawn, as noted, from a new study of Palestinian textbooks in which AJC was involved. Precisely because we knew this study, like its three predecessors, would be scrutinized microscopically by those seeking to discredit it, every translation from Arabic was reviewed by top experts in the field to ensure total accuracy. And the study itself, available at www.ajc.org, reflects context, nuance, and precision of language. Yet, all this wasn't good enough for the station, which, without putting anything down on paper, asserted that there were some questions about what was being said. Actually, a few days later, the New York Times had a front-page story on anti-Semitism, not anti-Israelism, in Gaza and made essentially the same point that schools are a key transmission belt for such hatred and incitement. We canceled our contract with Bloomberg. Our right to express our point of view - with an ironclad commitment in our texts to responsible messaging - was being stifled by those who, for whatever political or commercial reasons, were unwilling to allow us that right. I wonder if some of those same academic and cultural leading lights - from the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Israel and Norway - who rushed to Judt's side might be similarly disposed to support "the rules of the game in America" for us as well. After all, fair's fair, isn't it?
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Jonathon, Detroit,
Sunday Apr 06, 2008
Typical double standard. Criticizing Israel is perfectly acceptable, but criticizing muslim extremists or missile attacks on Israel is not allowed. The "intellectuals" continue to vociferously attack Israel and rationalize suicide bombings, while claiming they are being silenced. Carter and Judt should go live in Saudi arabia or Gaza and see what it really to means to live in a climate of intimidation.
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Morton Friedman Lanham, MD USA,
Sunday Apr 06, 2008
Let me understand. Bloomberg oblivious to what happens in his company? Like Obama, oblivious to his mentor of 20 years. But the Washington Post, and I suspect the NY Times, will willingly distrbute multi-page advertisements from our friends in Saudi Arabia, Russia, etc. As it is often said, 'Follow the Money'. But keep trying, and do not lose hope, perhaps, just perhaps, some will understand.
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Velvel,
Monday Apr 07, 2008
On average, if you tally up all the missiles fired and then divide by 365 days, it is more than daily. Sderot is getting hit daily with kassams. Even in the supposed "ceasefire" the fire hasn't ceased, only Israeli self-defense ceased.
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David Katcoff, Jericho, Vt,
Monday Apr 07, 2008
Well, look at the bright side: The NYTimes readership is way down. Despite the paper's running stories that highlight the truth of the AJC's allegations, it is still run by a bunch of namby-pamby leftists who coddle the Islamo-fascists and buy into their victimization lies. Their radio affiliates are cut from the same cheap cloth.
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JERRY BORIS PHILA,
Monday Apr 07, 2008
THE CENSORSHIP OF THIS PERFECTLY ADMIRABLE SPOT BY THE AMERICAN JEWISH COMMITTEE, FITS IN WITH THE NY TIMES DISDAIN FOR THE JEWISH AFFLICTED.
THIS IS THE SAME NY TIMES WHICH REFUSED TO PRINT MANY OF THE REPORTS FROM NAZI-OCCUPIED EUROPE, REVEALING THE NAZIS PUTTING THE JEWS TO DEATH, BECAUSE IT WOULD HAVE MADE THE NY TIMES, THEY CLAIMED, SEEM AS THOUGH IT WERE RUN FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE JEWS. BUT THEY WERE AND REMAIN, SIMPLY CRAVEN HYPOCRITES AND COWARDS.. WOJULD THEY SAY THE SAME FOR MARTIN LUTHER KING, SAY?
JERRY BORIS PHILA
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Jack Lefkowitz,
Monday Apr 07, 2008
Wow! What wonderful hasbara for Israel!! 15 seconds til the bomb hits.
Poor David Harris. He thinks that he can build support for Israel by scaring us to death. Auschwitz, Sderot, whatever works.
Pathetic. Is there nothing positive for this guy to say.
Funny how the only way he can get on the air is by purchasing the time! Some leader of the Jews! Foxman is everywhere and he doesn't buy the time. He gets to scare us but doesn't pay for the privilege.
Same with AIPAC. Why is this guy the only one who can only get attention by buying it??
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Aaron,
Monday Apr 07, 2008
This is another ridiculous double standard. Kudos to Harris for having the courage to pull its advertisements from Bloomberg and so eloquently articulating what has been going on for years! The Mayor should be made aware of what his station is doing. I forwarded this piece to all my friends, and I encourage everyone else to do the same.
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Phillip, Los Angeles,
Monday Apr 07, 2008
To number 6, if you listened to some of the other radio commentaries by Harris, they also address positive issues like technology coming out of Israel and the strong relationship between Israel and the United States. Further, it costs money to advertise and spread a message. Take a second to google Harris and read the countless articles and letters (none paid for) that have been published. May i ask what you are you doing Mr. Lefkowitz to support Israel?
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Jack Lefkowitz,
Monday Apr 07, 2008
To number 8.
Unlike Harris and the other Jewish "leaders" who take a $500,000 a year salary to scare Jews, I am a businessman. I don't take charity, I give it.
I live in Israel 7 months a year and own two houses there and a small business employing 8 people.
If this is not as goood as taking a huge salary from Jewish donors and living fulltime in NY, I give up,
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Gary, Miami,
Monday Apr 07, 2008
In universities around the U.S.A., and in the predominantly left wing media, freedom of speech granted under the constitution is encouraged, unless it fails to represent the left wing point of view. All other expressions or opinions, more likely based on fact, are stifled as promoting hate, or potentially promoting violent reaction (the way the so-called pacifist left wing reacts to someone else's opinion.) It's the left wing agenda or no agenda. How many left wing extremists have had to cancel speaking engagements at universities for "security" reasons?
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Stephen, New York,
Monday Apr 07, 2008
Mr. Lefkowitz, As you point out so vociferously, while tooting your horn as a successful businessman, money is not the issue here, but service to the Jewish people and humanity. On that score, David Harris gets extraordinary grades. There is simply no Jewish leader who has gained entree at the highest levels all over the world to the extent that Harris has. And what does he do with his access and entree? Only one single thing. He makes the case for the values we hold dear. And he does it with intelligence, thoughtfulness, passion, and class. Think about it, Mr. Lefkowitz.
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Naomi, New York,
Monday Apr 07, 2008
Not sure why #6&9 feels such animosity toward the Jewish leaders who are fighting day and night to support Israel. I admit that some like Foxman prostitute themselves to the media, but David Harris stays below the radar. He travels around the globe meeting world leaders and addressing the UN all because of his commitment to Israel. I applaud those like #6&9 who dedicate their extra money to Israel, how much the more so do I admire someone who dedicates his entire life to Israel.
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Tracey, Philadelphia,
Wednesday Apr 09, 2008
I am wondering: does this station reject commercials for McDonalds because they don't mention the merits of Burger King's Whopper?
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David K. Brooklyn, NY,
Thursday Apr 10, 2008
Add this to NY Times warped reporting. Within the last 3 years, the Jewish community has rallied 2 times in front of the United Nations when Ahmadinejad visited NY. The first time over 25,000 people were present. The second time, about 15,000. The NY Times printed not one word about either rally. Tens of thousands of people gathering to denounce a man calling for genocide, but the Times is silent. Oh- they were only Jews...
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arthur b.,
Thursday Apr 10, 2008
WQXR had one good reason to reject the Ad. The opening line could frighten listeners. They might have stopped listening in order to save themselves and/or their loved ones.§ Jewish citizens in particular ought to side with Israeli citizens who want a two-state solution. I reject a "my country right or wrong" position. At 77 years old I can remember the Jewish heritage & values we absorbed as children: Seek Justice; Help the less fortunate; Embrace tolerance and equality; and never lose Hope.
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M.Robinson, London,
Thursday Apr 10, 2008
I greatly admire Mr.Harris and the work he does on behalf of the Jewish people and the nation of Israel. I absolutely fail to understand how anyone can wish them anything but peace and prosperity after their thousands of years of trouble and persecution. Remember, God says to Israel; 'I will bless those who bless you and curse those who curse you'. You cursers of Israel had better watch out!
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Dan - New York,
Wednesday Jun 25, 2008
Try this, this will tell you everything you need to know about the NYTimes. Do a search of the New York Times website. Search "Isreal" or "Palestinian" or "Hamas". Look only at the article titles during some time of cross boarder turmoil. Israel will often be all CAPITAL letters and there will be action described in the title. "Palestinian" or "Hamas" are rarely in capital letters and rarely is there any action described. "ISREAL KILLS SIX" v.s. "Hamas responds with ___" Liberals expect their beliefs to be affirmed and reaffirmed by their paper.
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Dan - New York,
Wednesday Jun 25, 2008
The NY Times knows the reader is a Liberal, may not particularly interested in the story, BUT that reader will read the article titles and expect their beliefs to be affirmed. The article title is the editorial. NYTimes is tripe!
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