Archive | June 2024

Censorship stand comes back to bite the ADL on Wikipedia

Censorship stand comes back to bite the ADL on Wikipedia

JONATHAN S. TOBIN


The group championed censoring conservative groups on the Internet. Inevitably, its erstwhile leftist allies are now targeting the Jewish organization for opposing antisemitism.

Wikipedia. Credit: Gerd Altmann/Pixabay.

Most of the organized Jewish world is as outraged as the Anti-Defamation League. The decision of Wikipedia to label the ADL as an “unreliable source” on its site with respect to anything related to Israel generated a letter of protest from 43 of the largest and most influential American Jewish organizations, including a sampling of groups on the center, left and right. The notion that the ADL—still considered the authoritative source on the subject of antisemitism by the liberal media—being shut down by the ubiquitous online encyclopedia site in such a manner is shocking.

And none are more surprised than ADL’s CEO and national director Jonathan Greenblatt. That’s because during his decade in charge of the venerable organization, Greenblatt and the ADL have not just switched from being liberal but nonpartisan to open advocacy for the Democrats and the political left. They’ve also been prominent supporters of efforts to do to others what Wikipedia is doing to them now: censoring those who dissent from the political orthodoxies of the left.

In other words, what’s happening to ADL isn’t merely another example of how a major online company has succumbed to anti-Israel and antisemitic prejudice. It’s that the ADL’s pro-censorship chickens have come home to roost.

Wikipedia’s reason for declaring that the ADL can’t be cited as an authority on anything to do with Israel goes to the heart of the post-Oct. 7 surge in Jew-hatred in America. Boiled down to the essentials, they object to the fact that the ADL rightly labels anti-Zionism as a form of antisemitism. While they could cite no instances in which ADL had made false claims, the Wikipedia editors said that didn’t matter.

A double standard

ADL is a group that is supposed to advocate on behalf of the Jewish people, monitor antisemitism and support the right of the one Jewish state on the planet to exist. According to Wikipedia editors, this impairs its ability to accurately report facts about those, like the Hamas terrorists and their American apologists, who wish to destroy Israel and commit the genocide of its population.

Yet, as Greenblatt noted, this is not the same standard applied to organizations that advocate for the rights of other groups. No one, for example, at Wikipedia judges the NAACP by this standard when it speaks out on anti-black racism.

Nor would any reasonable person—let alone someone who controls the content on a widely used internet site—argue that African-Americans don’t have the right to define what is offensive to them or considered racist. Only Jews are lectured about what is or isn’t prejudice against Jews. And given the fact that anti-Zionists wish to deny rights to Jews, such as to live in peace and sovereignty in their ancient homeland and defend themselves, to any other people, the ADL is entirely correct to label them as Jew-haters. Indeed, if anything, the ADL has shown itself not as zealous as it should be in making this charge.

ADL tilts left

Even under the leadership of Greenblatt, who served as a Democratic Party staffer in the Barack Obama White House, the ADL has had its left-wing critics. In recent years, the ADL has striven mightily to stay in sync with its allies on the left. It endorsed the Black Lives Matter movement, no matter its open hostility to Israel and Zionism. And it incorporated toxic woke ideas about “white privilege” rooted in intersectionality and critical race theory into model curricula that it sells to school districts, despite the glaring evidence that these concepts grant a permission slip for antisemitism.

Just as important was the fact that despite the growing evidence of the influence and reach of left-wing antisemitism in mainstream politics and media, the ADL maintained that the real threat to Jews came from marginal right-wing extremists, whom it often sought to link to former President Donald Trump without proof. They also smeared former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, an ardent friend of Israel, as an Islamophobic bigot for opposing Islamist radicals.

But that was never good enough for the intersectional left. Even as it tilted away from the political center, the ADL remained essentially pro-Israel, which is unacceptable for “progressives” who falsely label Israel and the Jews as “white” oppressors of people of color. As a columnist at the increasingly anti-Zionist Forward newspaper noted, the minority of Jews who oppose the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s working definition of antisemitism because it includes anti-Zionism and demonization of Israel as one of its examples of Jew-hatred seem happy to see Wikipedia undermine the ADL.

This is outrageous and doubly so because after the atrocities committed on Oct. 7—the largest mass slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust—for Wikipedia to align itself with anti-Zionists in this fashion is not so much an editorial decision but another indication of just how far the subsequent surge in antisemitism has spread.

Even as it is right to complain about this, the ADL is at the same time demonstrating just how hypocritical and short-sighted it has been since Greenblatt took over.

Censorship industrial complex

In the last several years, ADL has been part of an effort to enforce censorship on the Internet, especially social-media platforms and other services essential to online commerce. It was initially goaded into the stand by celebrities like actor Sacha Baron Cohen, whom ADL honored after he demanded that Facebook stop allowing antisemites access to its site. But the group became part of what writer Ben Weingarten has aptly named the censorship industrial complex. That describes an effort in which a sinister combination of Internet and social-media companies, left-wing nonprofit groups and the Biden administration sought to shut down conservatives who dissented from a wide range of policies. Unfortunately, the U.S. Supreme Court passed on an opportunity to stop this blatant violation of the free-speech rights of citizens this week in a case that may serve as a green light for future efforts by the Biden administration and its Silicon Valley oligarch allies.

Twitter files uncovered after the company was bought by billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk revealed the extent to which the government and Big Tech had combined efforts to silence their opponents. Greenblatt openly boasted of his involvement in this campaign, speaking of how he and his staff have been advising all the big Internet companies on their “content moderation” and coaching PayPal on how to demonetize groups it deems extremist. It also worked with Google and a British company called Moonshot LVE on a program to redirect users from hate sites but, as was soon discovered, some of the sites to which they were sent were themselves hateful.

The point of all this was to create a virtual public square in which conservatives would be likely to be shut down or shadow-banned, a measure by which social-media companies make content impossible to access. The ADL was happy to be part of it because of its political alignment with the people who were doing the censoring, which they justified by falsely claiming that the victims were all spreading hate.

Boomeranging on the Jews

Some critics warned the ADL that in addition to this being antithetical to democratic values or the ability of the United States to survive as a constitutional republic, this sort of “free speech for me but not for thee” attitude was bound to boomerang on the Jews. That’s because most of the people doing the censoring of the right were equally interested in silencing supporters of Israel because intersectional ideology labeled it as a villain.

The Wikipedia decision represents the thin edge of the wedge when it comes to Big Tech using its vast power to shape public discourse on the war against the Jewish state. It’s a reminder to both the ADL and the rest of the Jewish community that though they may wish for an Internet where bad actors like Nazis and other open antisemites are no longer present, the only way to make that happen means the creation of a censorship regime that can just as easily be used against Jews and Zionists, who left-wingers also think of as hateful. The ADL has been playing with fire by backing censorship, and it is unsurprising though ironic that it has wound up being singed by the flames they helped fan. If the ADL wants to defend the Jewish people, it’s also going to have to return to an understanding that the only way to defend their rights is to defend the principle of free speech for everyone—and not just its leftist political allies.


Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS (Jewish News Syndicate). Follow him @jonathans_tobin.


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Amsterdam Museum Returns Matisse Painting to Heirs of Holocaust Victim

Amsterdam Museum Returns Matisse Painting to Heirs of Holocaust Victim

Shiryn Ghermezian


People are seen walking at Museumplein near Stedelijk Museum (L) Rijksmuseum (Background), and Van Gogh Museum (R) on Nov. 3, 2020 in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Photo: Paulo Amorim/Sipa USA via Reuters Connect

Amsterdam’s Stedelijk Museum said on Tuesday that it will return a Henri Matisse painting from the 1920s to the heirs of its former Jewish owner, who was forced to sell the artwork in the Netherlands during the Holocaust before being deported to a Nazi camp where he eventually died.

The painting “Odalisque” has been in the collection of the Stedelijk Museum, which is owned by the Municipality of Amsterdam, since July 1941. The painting was sold to the museum by the late Albert Stern, a successful textile manufacturer and art collector in Germany who was born in 1861. He led one of Germany’s leading ladies’ clothing manufacturers that had branches in New York, London, Copenhagen, and Amsterdam. The company’s former headquarters in Berlin is now the building used by the German Federal Ministry of Justice.

Following research into the painting’s provenance, the Dutch Restitutions Committee concluded “that it is sufficiently plausible that the sale of the painting was connected to the measures taken by the occupying forces against Jewish members of the population and arose from a desire for self-preservation,” the Stedelijk Museum said. The committee has advised that the museum return the painting to Stern’s legal successors and the Amsterdam City Council, which owns the painting, will adhere to that advisement.

After Nazi leader Adolf Hitler rose to power in Germany in Jan. 1933, Stern and his family faced persecution for being Jewish and were stripped of their possessions and livelihood. “The Nazis had expropriated [Stern’s] business, its building, the family’s home and its possessions together with most of their assets, and the family had gone into exile, where they continued to be subject to physical threat by the Nazis,” said the Commission for Looted Art in Europe, which represents the Stern heirs.

The Stern family emigrated to the Netherlands in 1937 but, following the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands, they faced additional persecution and made several, unsuccessful attempts to escape. The once wealthy family was forced to sell their remaining possessions to try to survive.

“The family’s circumstances deteriorated to such an extent that it was forced to sell its belongings,” the museum said. “Since the Stern family needed the money to flee, the Restitutions Committee ruled that this was an involuntary loss of possession due to circumstances directly related to the Nazi regime.”

Stern sold the Matisse in one of his last efforts to escape Europe with his family, including his children and grandchildren. However, he was unsuccessful in obtaining visas to other countries, including the United States, Mexico, Haiti, Cuba, Uruguay, Brazil, and the Dominican Republic, according to the Commission for Looted Art in Europe. Stern’s family were all arrested and deported to different Nazi concentration camps, where most of them died except his wife and two of his grandchildren. Stern died in the Laufen internment camp in January 1945.

“The return of the Matisse is a moving and overwhelming moment for us all,” Stern’s heirs said in a statement. “Our grandparents loved art and music and theater, it was the center of their lives. In the few years we had our grandmother after the war, she transmitted that love to us, and it has enriched our lives ever since.”

“The Matisse underwent the same journey from Berlin to Amsterdam as our grandparents. But it stopped there in the Stedelijk, with almost no acknowledgement from whence it came for 80 years,” they added. “The family has carried the scars of its unbearable and tragic history alone. Now finally, thanks to the Dutch Restitutions Committee, this is being acknowledged. The decision has provided symbolic justice to our grandfather.”

Rein Wolfs, director of the Stedelijk Museum, said the museum welcomes the Dutch Restitutions Committee’s conclusion about “Odalisque.”

“It is a step forward that, together with the heirs, represented by the Commission for Looted Art in Europe, we have been able to jointly submit this case to the Dutch Restitutions Committee,” he added. “This artwork represents a very sad history and is connected to the unspeakable suffering inflicted on this family. The ruling of the Restitutions Committee does justice to this history, and we naturally follow their binding advice.”

Touria Meliani, the alderman of culture at the municipality of Amsterdam, called the suffering that Jews experienced during World War II “unprecedented and irreversible.”

“Jewish citizens have had their property, rights, dignity, and in many cases their lives taken away,” Meliani added. “To the extent that anything can be repaired from the great injustice done to them, we as a society have a moral obligation to act accordingly. The return of works of art, such as the ‘Odalisque’ painting, can mean a lot to the victims and is of great importance for the recognition of the injustice done to them. As a city we have a role and responsibility in this.”


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Plan Białego Domu wykluczenia Izraela ze Strefy Gazy

Prezydent USA Joe Biden i izraelski premier Benjamin Netanjahu w Nowym Jorku 20 września 2023 r. (Źródło zdjęcia: Wikipedia.)


Plan Białego Domu wykluczenia Izraela ze Strefy Gazy
Shoshana Bryen
Tłumaczenie: Małgorzata Koraszewska

Wydaje się, że administracja Bidena chce, aby po wojnie Gazę kontrolowały „siły” w większości palestyńskie.

W „Politico”, w dużej mierze przeoczonym artykule, czytamy: „Administracja Bidena rozważa mianowanie amerykańskiego urzędnika, który miałby służyć jako główny doradca cywilny sił w większości palestyńskich po zakończeniu konfliktu między Izraelem a Hamasem, powiedziało czterech urzędników amerykańskich – co jest oznaką, że USA planuje wysokie zaangażowanie w zabezpieczeniu powojennej Strefy Gazy”.

W artykule dodano: „Doradca cywilny miałby siedzibę w regionie i ściśle współpracował z dowódcą sił [porządkowych], który byłby albo Palestyńczykiem, albo pochodził z narodu arabskiego, powiedzieli”.

Nie wiadomo, jak faktycznie ten plan się sprawdzi – czy wojska amerykańskie zostaną w to zaangażowane, czy nie – to pozostaje do ustalenia, ale wyjaśnia to trwającą i bardzo kosztowną klęskę pływającego portu w Gazie.


Pływający port w Gazie
 – marnotrawstwo pieniędzy podatników o wartości 329 milionów dolarów, zaprojektowany w celu zażegnania „głodu” w Gazie – w czerwcu ponownie rozpadł się z powodu wzburzonego morza (po naprawie o wartości 20 milionów dolarów w kwietniu) i zwrócono go do Aszdod w Izraelu. Ponownie.

Ale to w jest porządku.

Rzecznik Departamentu Obrony, generał dywizji Patrick Ryder, powiedział pod koniec maja, że według szacunków Departamentu żadna pomoc z portu zbudowanego w USA nie dotarła do ludności Gazy. Dodał, że USA, Izrael i ONZ omawiają „alternatywne trasy” dla ciężarówek z pomocą humanitarną.

Nie wydawał się szczególnie zmartwiony.

Być może dzieje się tak dlatego, że panika związana z potencjalnym głodem w Gazie wydaje się obecnie bezpodstawna. Była to fałszywka mająca na celu oczernienie państwa Izrael.

Skąd wiemy? ONZ tak stwierdziła. Naprawdę? Tak. ONZ opublikowała niedawno raport na temat sytuacji sporządzony przez Komisję ds. Przeglądu Głodu (Famine Review Committee -FRC).

Analityk Mark Zlochin zauważył, że media zataiły raport, prawdopodobnie dlatego, że zawarte w nim „wnioski nie są spójne z apokaliptyczną narracją forsowaną przez ‘organizacje humanitarne’ w ciągu ostatnich kilku miesięcy”.

Dodał, że FRC nie uznała twierdzeń o głodzie za „wiarygodne, biorąc pod uwagę niepewność i brak zbieżności dowodów potwierdzających”.

Z pewnością administracja Bidena miała lepsze informacje niż propagandowa transmisja z kierowanego przez Hamas Ministerstwa Zdrowia Gazy lub „The New York Times” . Co sobie ta administracja myślała?

Myślała o uzyskaniu dostępu do Gazy bez udziału Izraela, by narzucić swoje powojenne plany.

Bez Izraela.

Wkraczanie w czyjąś wojnę i szkolenie cudzych żołnierzy bardzo różni się od niesienia pomocy humanitarnej głodnym ludziom. Amerykanie powinni o tym wiedzieć. Nasze doświadczenia w Afganistanie, Jemenie i Iraku nie były dobre. Nasza współpraca z libańskimi siłami zbrojnymi i UNIFIL-em pozwoliła na ekspansję Hezbollahu, ruinę niegdyś stabilnego kraju i rosnące zagrożenie dla Izraela. Poproszono nas o opuszczenie Nigru, gdzie współpracowaliśmy z ich siłami zbrojnymi w walce z ISIS w Afryce.

A Palestyńczycy?

Po Porozumieniach z Oslo Stany Zjednoczone utworzyły „palestyńską policję” (spotkałam się z nimi w latach 90. w towarzystwie emerytowanych amerykańskich oficerów wojskowych, którzy mieli pewność, że jest to armia w trakcie szkolenia). W 2005 r. utworzono Biuro Koordynatora Bezpieczeństwa USA dla Izraela i Autonomii Palestyńskiej, którego zadaniem było „przekształcenie i profesjonalizacja palestyńskich grup zbrojnych po drugiej intifadzie (2000-2005)”. Pozwoliło to na formalne utworzenie armii palestyńskiej.

Po wyborze Hamasu do parlamentu w 2006 r., przed palestyńską wojną domową w Gazie, Stany Zjednoczone postrzegały armię palestyńską jako środek do kontrolowania Hamasu w Judei i Samarii, a także w Gazie. Plan nie zadziałał.

W 2010 roku magazyn „Janes’ Defense Weekly” napisał, że AP przygotowała plan zakończenia amerykańskich szkoleń i nadzoru. Amerykański generał, który wcześniej „dowodził”, miał zostać ograniczony do „przynoszenia pieniędzy i sprzętu dla sił bezpieczeństwa”. Nie zajmowałby się „operacjami ani rozlokowaniem sił AP. […] Funkcjonariusze powiedzieli, że kierownictwo AP […] uznało, że interwencja USA utrudnia rozwój sił bezpieczeństwa i podważa legitymację reżimu”.

Stany Zjednoczone pozostały zaangażowane.

W 2014 r. odkryto powiązania CIA z Generalną Służbą Wywiadowczą (GIS) AP i jej Prewencyjnym Aparatem Bezpieczeństwa (PSA) – choć nie z „siłami zbrojnymi” szkolonymi przez wojsko USA.

Organizacja Human Rights Watch opublikowała raport na temat sił bezpieczeństwa AP po setkach raportów o torturach i „pozaprogramowych” aresztowaniach. „Ciągle napływają doniesienia o torturach stosowanych przez palestyńskie służby bezpieczeństwa  – powiedział Joe Stork, zastępca dyrektora Human Rights Watch na Bliski Wschód. – Prezydent [Mahmoud] Abbas i premier [Salam] Fajjad doskonale zdają sobie sprawę z sytuacji”.

I nadal wiedzą.

Jest dobrą, choć nie zaskakującą wiadomością, że naród palestyński nie głoduje pomimo wstrzymania pomocy przez Egipt, ostrzału przejścia Kerem Szalom, kradzieżą pomocy przez Hamas oraz awarii pływającego portu w Gazie.

Dobrą wiadomością byłoby również, gdyby Stany Zjednoczone koordynowały plan dotyczący przyszłości Strefy Gazy ze swoim sojusznikiem Izraelem, a nie z Autonomią Palestyńską, która ma długą historię podważania pokoju i bezpieczeństwa swojego narodu, a także Izraela.


Shoshana Bryen – amerykańska dziennikarka, jest w zarządzie Jewish Policy Center oraz jest redaktor naczelną inFOCUS Quarterly


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Paris Hotel Refuses to Serve Israeli Family as Antisemitism Continues to Spiral in France

Paris Hotel Refuses to Serve Israeli Family as Antisemitism Continues to Spiral in France

Jacob Frankel


Anti-Israel demonstration supporting the BDS movement, Paris France, June 8, 2024. Photo: Claire Serie / Hans Lucas via Reuters Connect

An Israeli family visiting Paris was denied service at a hotel after an attendant noticed their Israeli passports, continuing a record spike in antisemitism across France that has increasingly led to violence against the Jewish community.

According to the French magazine Le Point, the Israeli family of three intended to spend three nights in Paris. Although they had booked their Novotel Paris Porte de Versailles hotel room online, an attendant informed the family, after seeing their Israeli passports, that the price of the room had increased.

“He completely changed face,” the father said in a complaint to French authorities, according to the publication.

Novotel’s Porte de Versailles hotel in Paris. An Israeli family was turned away from the hotel after an attendant noticed their Israeli passports. Photo: Accor Group

“When he saw that I had an Israeli passport, he told me that the room would cost 1,219 Euros in the end; he increased the price voluntarily,” the father continued.

The attendant also allegedly hurled antisemitic accusations at the family, including, “Israel, you think you are kings of the world; you will not have a room in this hotel!”

The family was turned away from the hotel at 1:30 am and forced to stay elsewhere. The attendant “treated us with contempt and racism,” the father said.

Accor, the group that manages Novotel, offered the family compensation after their poor treatment.

The incident came amid a spike in antisemitism to record levels across France.

In an especially egregious attack that has garnered international headlines, a 12-year-old Jewish girl was raped by three Muslim boys in a Paris suburb on June 15, according to the French authorities. The child told investigators that the assailants called her a “dirty Jew” and hurled other antisemitic comments at her during the attack.

The three alleged attackers were arrested by French police two days after the rape. Two of them were indicted for gang rape, death threats, antisemitic violence, attempted extortion, and invasion of privacy. The third boy was charged as a witness. 

After the attack, French President Emmanuel Macron “denounced the scourge of antisemitism” overtaking French society and spoke of the need to combat hatred of Jews in schools. 

French President Emmanuel Macron speaks during a press conference in Paris, France, June 12, 2024. Photo: REUTERS/Stephane Mahe

The parents of the girl agreed to speak anonymously with the French newspaper Le Parisien in an interview that was published on Monday. They described the attack as a “mimicry” of Hamas’ sexual violence against Israeli girls and women during the Palestinian terrorist group’s onslaught across southern Israel on Oct. 7.

The rape in France reportedly occurred after the assailants discovered that the victim was Jewish. “Why did you lie? I know you are not Muslim. So what religion are you?” the boys yelled at her before the attack, according to her parents. 

According to the girl’s mother, “before they let her leave, they made her swear by Allah not to tell her parents or police.”

The assault was antisemitic and motivated by the war in Gaza, her parents told Le Parisien. “This incident is a sign of a collective social failure in the fight against antisemitism and extreme violence,” they said.

Jewish children were also targeted in another Paris suburb this past weekend. On Saturday, six Jewish minors were assaulted at a movie theater in the suburb of Levallois-Perret. According to reports, three assailants yelled antisemitic slurs at the minors and “slapped one of them several times,” before the victims fled toward Jerusalem Square in the French capital’s 17th arrondissement, where they filed a police complaint. French police are investigating the incident.

“I condemn the physical attack of antisemitic nature in which several young minors were victims,” Geoffroy Boulard, mayor of the 17th arrondissement, wrote on X/Twitter in response to the assault.

The recent antisemitic attacks came amid a record surge of antisemitism in France in the wake of Hamas’ Oct. 7 massacre across southern Israel. Antisemitic incidents rose by over 1,000 percent in the final three months of 2023 compared with the previous year, with over 1,200 incidents reported — greater than the total number of incidents in France for the previous three years combined.


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Jew-hatred reportedly rose 80% in Germany in 2023

Jew-hatred reportedly rose 80% in Germany in 2023

UPDATE DESK | World News


“Violence against Jews has been justified, trivialized or denied,” per a new German study

.
From left: Andrea Despot, chair of the EVZ Foundation; Joseph Schuster, president of Germany’s Central Council of Jews; and Felix Klein, Germany’s federal antisemitism commissioner, pose with placards stating “We remember,” in reference to International Holocaust Remembrance Day in Berlin, Jan. 25, 2024. Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images.

The 4,782 documented instances of Jew-hatred in Germany in 2023—2,787 of which happened after Oct. 7—represent an 80% increase over 2022, according to a report from the Federal Association of Departments for Research and Information Centers on Antisemitism.

On average, about 33 antisemitic incidents occurred per day in Germany from Oct. 7 until the end of the year, compared to a little more than seven daily from Jan. 1 to Oct. 7, 2023, according to the new data, released on Tuesday by the Bundesverband RIAS, which is funded by the German state.

Two-thirds of the instances that involved “extreme violence, assaults and threats” also took place after Oct. 7, per the study.

“The antisemitic massacres and terrorist attacks in Israel motivate people in Germany to engage in antisemitic behavior,” said Bianca Loy, research associate at the Bundesverband RIAS and co-author of the study. “Many well-known antisemitic stereotypes have been updated and applied to the Hamas massacres, and the war in Israel and Gaza.”

Owing to this, she added, “violence against Jews has been justified, trivialized or denied.”

Loy called the situation, in which many have to hide their Jewish identities, “alarming and unacceptable.”

“The unprecedented rise in antisemitic incidents must be understood as a wake-up call,” stated Benjamin Steinitz, managing director of the Bundesverband RIAS. “The state has the responsibility to ensure that Jews can safely participate in civic life.”


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