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US Media Accused of Racist Gaza Coverage

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Jennifer Epps
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“Israel functions as an extension of American power,” Becker explained, claiming that the U.S. “uses Israel as a bludgeon” against others in the Middle East “considered to be an enemy by the U.S.” -- countries which, according to Becker, just want self-determination.

The blockade against the people of Gaza was a joint endeavor, he believes. “The US and Israel used food and medicine against the people for having voted the wrong way”, in other words, for having voted for Hamas.

It was outrage at this ‘special relationship,’ as U.S. joint actions with Israel are officially called, that spurred representatives of Jews Against the Occupation and also of Partnership for Civil Justice (a legal organization for civil and human rights), as well as two-time U.S. Congresswoman and former presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney, repeat presidential candidate Ralph Nader, and Rev. Graylan Hagler, the National President of Ministers for Racial, Social and Economic Justice, to speak at the Jan. 10th protest rally in D.C.

Rev. Hagler is featured in the anti-war documentary Finding Our Voices: Stories of American Dissent, and his organization is the 1.2 million-member “clergy component of the mainline Protestant denomination United Church of Christ,” a church which, according to Wikipedia, has had many famous members such as Howard Dean, Bob Graham, theologians Paul Tillich and Reinhold Niebuhr, best-selling author Dean Koontz, and also Oprah Winfrey. In fact, even Barack Obama is on Wikipedia’s list of notable names connected with the United Church of Christ.

An argument could be made that some of that might be newsworthy, but the Washington Post begged to differ.

Interestingly, some Gaza protests outside the U.S. have also been ignored by American mainstream media. Even when Time magazine’s commemorative issue (Feb. 2) on Obama’s inauguration ran an article on Israeli peaceniks, “Lonesome Doves,” its sub-title read: “After the Gaza offensive, Israel’s peace activists are losing heart, numbers, and influence.”  Its author, Tim McGirk, claimed that “inside Israel, peace demonstrations gathered only a few hundred protestors.” And yet, reports from alternative sources such as the Jewish Peace News and Democracy Now! reported that 10,000 Jews and Arabs attended a demonstration on Jan. 3rd in Tel Aviv. This salient information has not been reported widely, and certainly not in that Time article; instead the article’s only photos of protesters showed a huddle of pro-war demonstrators holding giant Israeli flags.

Indeed, outspoken media critic Jon Stewart skewered the corporate media’s one-sidedness on the region early in the Gaza offensive, in a Daily Show segment that has circulated the web.

Back in L.A., ANSWER-L.A. held a teach-in on Palestine on Jan. 24th: “The U.S./Israeli War on Gaza & the Cease-Fire: The Real Aims Behind the Media Lies.” About 75 activists attended to hear talks by Jerusalem law professor Dr. Nadera Shalhoub-Kervorkian, of the Arab Center for Applied Social Research in Haifa; community organizer and UCLA Ph.D. student Rana Sharif, of the Palestinian American Women’s Association; and Yousef Abudayyeh, founding member of the National Council of Arab Americans and National Coordinator of the Free Palestine Alliance.

Several of ANSWER-L.A.’s most active organizers shared their thoughts on the media’s behavior toward Gaza.  Longtime ANSWER-L.A. spokesperson Preston Wood explained that U.S. corporate interests reflected in the media “are united to oppress and dominate all of the Middle East,” and that part of the U.S. mass media’s agenda is “to undermine the right of people in that region for sovereignty and self-determination.”

Carlos Alvarez, candidate for L.A. Mayor on March 3rd in opposition to vocal Israel-defender, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, criticized the U.S. media for lopsided coverage and recalled that “very few media outlets did stories” on the Israeli bombings of U.N. shelters, when Israel “told people to go there, sent messages ‘evacuate your house within 20 minutes and you should go here’ and then they bombed the place they’d told them to go.” He recalls that when the media did cover this, “we heard that rockets were being fired from there, but the U.N. denied that.”

Muna Coobtee, ANSWER Steering Committee member and a presenter at the forum, was matter-of-fact about the unanimity of the U.S. media on Palestine. “It’s not a big huge conspiracy, it’s actually very overt. The line of the media is very much in line with U.S. foreign policy.”

Coobtee noted that prior to Jan. 10th, the second National Day of Emergency Mass Action on Gaza, (the first having been Dec. 30th) there had been a “surprising” amount of coverage of the frequent protests, considering expectations people in the movement have about the corporate media. She believes such coverage happened because there was “such worldwide opposition”, because “the protests were so widespread,” and because of “the extreme nature of the attacks” by Israel on Gaza. At the same time, she noted, the U.S. media tended to “make 2,000 pro-Palestinian demonstrators equal 200 pro-Israeli demonstrators, or maybe even film from the side of the Israelis.”

However, Coobtee says “there was very minimal coverage about Jan. 10th,” which was the largest day of protest of all, when a total of hundreds of thousands came out in many different cities.

Alvarez agreed that “there was more than average coverage before Jan. 20th”, though it was “problematic, because they often put a big fat equal sign between Israeli and pro-Palestinian protesters, even though there’d be thousands of pro-Palestinians and only a handful of Israeli” counter-demonstrators. Right at the peak of the protests on Jan. 10th, though, Alvarez saw “a complete suppression” of coverage; “suddenly you weren’t hearing anything about those protests.”

Wood added: “it’s been a long-standing practice to try to ignore the expression of anti-war sentiment, to try to minimize dissent in this country.” He thinks all people who care about peace and justice should be outraged that “the media in the U.S. have once again ignored the suffering” of civilians in the Middle East and downplayed the reality of the events in Gaza, which are particularly shocking” and include “the most flagrant violations of international law, such as use of depleted uranium and fragmentation bombs that literally rip the flesh off of children.”

Although the ANSWER Coalition was one of the most central groups organizing these recent anti-war protests for Gaza (just as they also played a key role in pulling together the even more massive protests against the war on Iraq), they are by no means alone in continuing to be concerned about peace and justice in Gaza. The Bail Out the People Movement (which joins labor, Latino, and Black organizations working for the rights of ordinary people during the economic crisis) gave public talks in L.A. about Gaza on both Saturday and Sunday. Also in L.A. this past weekend, a benefit concert raised money for humanitarian aid to Gaza, as did a pre-ceasefire L.A. event featuring Cynthia McKinney, the former Congresswoman and the survivor of the Israeli-military ramming of her humanitarian-mission boat. (McKinney is part of the Free Gaza Movement, an international group of activists who for some months had been giving their time and risking their safety to attempt to bring aid by sea to the blockaded Gaza Strip.)

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Jennifer Epps is a peace, social justice, pro-democracy, environmentalist and animal activist in L.A. She has also been a scriptwriter, stage director, actor, puppeteer, and film critic. Her political film reviews are collected at: (more...)
 
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