Wednesday, February 19, 2025

AR-Online Posted Friday, January 31, 2003


Quick navigationsearch

Alphabetical index (text)list   Index to the Traditional Enemies of Free Speech list

British national newspaper’s shocking anti-Ariel cartoon recalls ancient “blood libel” on the Jewish people

 

independent


Friday, January 31, 2003

 

Click on the image to enlarge

Caption: What’s wrong… you never
seen a politician kissing
babies before? (After Goya)

sharon 200

 

Satire or anti-Semitism: For and against

 

pullquote openOn Monday, ‘The Independent’ published a savage cartoon of Israel’s Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon. It prompted complaints from the Israeli Embassy, Jewish groups, and some of our readers, who were offended by the image. Today, we ask the we ask the question: was this cartoon anti-Semitic? and throw the debate open to our Argument channel pullquote close

 

 

[Go to this link for articles below]

For and against

Read Gerald Kaufman MP in defence of the cartoon, and Ned Tomke, editor of ‘The Jewish Chronicle’, for the prosecution

In context

Philip Hensher discusses the cartoon’s relationship to Goya’s Saturn Devouring One of His Sons, while the cartoonist Dave Brown describes its creation

Have your say

Read more comment and add your voice in our Argument channel

What the readers said

  • ‘I was sickened to see the cartoon depicting Sharon as an ogre eating a child’ Paul Gross, Middlesex
  • ‘Dave brown’s cartoon of Ariel Sharon was not only legitimate but brilliant’ — William Frost, Dorking
  • ‘I am shocked that you have evoked an ancient Jewish stereotype which would not have looked out of place in “der Stürmer”‘ — Shuli Davidovich, Israeli Embassy
  • ‘When the image was Romano Prodi chewing the head off Britannia, no one batted an eyelid. Is the EU fair game, but Israel not?’ — Michael Wintle, Hull
  • ‘Reporters would do well to realise that there are two sides to every story’ — Rabbi Ariel Abel, London
  • ‘The criticism is of repressive policies, not the Jewish faith, to which I proudly belong,’ — Michael Halpern, Middlesex
  • ‘Even the Nazis tried to distance themselves from this sort of prejudice’– Gideon Katz, London

 

related

pp Our website dossier on the origins of anti-Semitism

The above news item is reproduced without editing other than typographical

 Register your name and address to go on the Mailing List to receiveDavid Irving's ACTION REPORT

© Focal Point 2003 F Irving write to David Irving