Propaganda and censorship in Gaza

Rachel Shabi in the Guardian points out the role of Israel’s recently-created National Information Directorate in the portrayal of the conflict in Gaza. The Directorate was set up after an inquiry in to the second Lebanon war in 2006, with the aim of co-ordinating the message going out to international media.

But propaganda and censorship could yet backfire. Robert Fisk is critical of the IDF’s barring of foreign journalists from Gaza. When the Israelis did this in 2000, exaggerated claims of a massacre in Jenin emerged, without the possibility of verification by independent reporters.

Harry Potter imports banned

An Arab-Israeli publisher has been ordered to stop importing Arabic-language books from Syria and Lebanon. Salah Abassi gave an interview to Israeli public radio on 11 August in which he stated that the Trade and Industry Ministry had ‘warned’ him that his actions were illegal. Abassi claims that Arabic translations of certain books such as the Harry Potter series can only be sourced from Lebanon or Syria. The ban is based on a decree issued under the British mandate, which forbids the importing of books from hostile nations.

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Finkelstein 1 – Israel 0


The decision to bar Norman Finkelstein from entering the country is a spectacular own goal for Israel, writes Daphna Baram

American Jewish academic Norman Finkelstein is a persona non grata in Israel. He found out about it when he attempted a visit in late May. Israeli security services, Shin Bet, arrested him at Ben Gurion Airport near Tel Aviv, interrogated him for a few hours, and deported him back to Amsterdam, where he came from. ‘It wasn’t a Belgian bed and breakfast but it wasn’t Auschwitz either,’ he told his friends. Despite such fine distinctions, he called them ‘Jewish Nazis’ to their faces, a typical tactless move which hardly improved the situation. Israeli security services say Finkelstein is a security risk. It is unlikely that he’ll be let into Israel again.

The Israeli broadsheet Ha’aretz, in a leader article attacking the Israeli decision, speculated that the alleged security hazard had to do with the fact that Finkelstein visited Hezbollah fighters and commanders in Lebanon after the Israeli invasion of 2006. Finkelstein did not creep into Lebanon under cover. He shared his positive impression of the people he met in articles he had written for various publications, including Ha’aretz. There’s nothing illegal in Finkelstein’s actions in Lebanon, but he made enemies in the Israeli establishment due to different reasons altogether. His book The Holocaust Industry described in chilling detail and without any Zionist sentimentality the way in which Israel has taken over the commemoration of Holocaust victims and incorporated the right to speak in their name and use their deaths in service of the state’s political, economic and propagandist interests. The grotesque picture of greed, cynicism, political craftsmanship and sheer chutzpah which he portrayed was made all the more embarrassing for Israel and its supporters abroad by the very fact that Finkelstein himself is the son of Holocaust survivors. In the macabre political discourse in which identifying who is more of a victim is the name of the game, his right to speak out was harder to challenge.
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