Evans had consistently rejected pressure
to change his approach to the subject and refused to stop
submitting the cartoons. He accepted the editor's right
to reject cartoons but not to dictate their content. I was
specifically told not to draw any more cartoons about Israel's
policy in the territories, Evans said.
The cartoon that brought matters to a
head was submitted in June, equating the situation in the
West Bank with that of an apartheid regime. Evans had drawn
the word apartheid as graffiti on a crumbling wall, replacing
the second a with a Star of David. The cartoon simply depicted
a political truth the dispossession and confinement of an
entire population pursued as a matter of official policy
in an appropriately graphic form.
Pro-Zionist spokesmen, including the
Israeli ambassador to Australia and New Zealand, Gabby Levy,
were quick to applaud the sacking. Geoff Levy, head of the
Auckland Jewish Council, said Evans had caused damage to
Judaism and the Jews. This line was repeated by others,
such as Waikato University political science professor Dov
Bing, who added that freedom of the press was not absolute.
Both Bing and Levy urged further punitive action against
Evans, claiming he had intended to incite racial hatred,
which was illegal under New Zealand law.
Behind these comments is the fundamental
lie that anti-Zionism equals anti-Semitism. Zionism, the
founding ideology of the Israeli state and the Sharon government,
is a reactionary, racist doctrine that pits Jews against
Arabs. Its basic proposition, that the Jewish people must
live within an exclusive state maintained and protected
by the United States and other imperialist powers is the
reverse side of the coin of anti-Semitism. It is the basis
of an ongoing war of suppression and genocide against the
Palestinian people, often using methods similar to those
used by the Nazis against Jews.
Indeed, there is deepening opposition
among Jewish people to Sharon's brutal policies. The Israeli
government is pursuing, in an increasingly fascistic and
aggressive manner, the interests of a section of its own
financial elite and the Bush administration. Among its litany
of victims are the jobs, living standards and basic rights
of the Israeli working class.
Anti-Semitism, like all forms of bigotry
and discrimination, must be opposed unconditionally. But
the policies of the Sharon government are increasingly a
factor in igniting a renewal of anti-Semitic sentiment,
and represent the greatest threat to Jewish people around
the world.
Evans has firmly denied that there is
any anti-Semitism behind his work, saying to be called an
anti-Semite or a Nazi as I have been is just disgraceful
in my view. Evans said his cartoons were prompted by the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict having escalated to a ferocity
not seen before and quoted Nietzsche: Beware when you fight
demons, lest you become one.
The Evans case is not isolated. Recent
years have seen a concerted international campaign by the
political and media establishment, notably in the US and
Britain, to intimidate and silence all opposition to Israeli
policy by slandering as anti-Semite any political organisation,
commentator, academic or student group that criticises the
Sharon regime. This stifling of debate and outright political
censorship has intensified in the context of the US-led
war on terror. Editorial cartoonists have been among the
targets. In the US, syndicated cartoons such as Aaron McGruder's
The Boondocks have been deemed offensive or unpatriotic
following the 2001 terrorist attacks and dropped by major
papers.
Evans' sacking is another indication
of a rightward turn in domestic and international affairs
by the New Zealand and Australian political and business
elites. Concerted attempts are being made to wind back all
basic democratic rights and stifle oppositional sentiment
in every sphere of life. The television, radio and print
media increasingly run by a handful of powerful corporations
pursuing a reactionary agenda are vital components in this
process.
See Also:
A
crude attempt to equate anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism
[22 December 2003]
The
campaign for Israeli divestment and the charge of anti-Semitism
[10 April 2003]
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