Friday, April 27, 2018

And What Do You Think of Haaretz?

Originally posted at Israel Blogger as The Paper for “Thinking People”

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Haaretz, the left-leaning, sorry, make that tumbling over, newspaper founded in 1919 is notorious for blatantly biased coverage of traditional Judaism, normative Zionism and anything that does not promote an extreme progressive, humanitarian and liberal outlook.

Here are CAMERA’s examples of what they found wrong in the pages and website of Haaretz.

The paper, admittedly, is interesting, has a first class economics section, its literary supplement is on a high standard and everyone who thinks or wants to be anyone of power and status reads it. Of course, there really aren’t that many Israelis who subscribe. Its main clout is in its English-language edition which has hooked up with The Forward and the New York Times.

To be fair, it once interviewed me.  One of its stalwarts, Rogel Alpher, had me on his radio program and described me as “Yisrael Medad is a high-profile right-wing journalist and blogger.” I am on friendly terms with its owner and publisher, Amos Schocken, for who I served as a guide to Tel Shiloh where I live. Eli Pollak and I have published about its shortcomings in our Media Comment column at the Jerusalem Post, like here.

Its selling pitch is: “for the people who think”. It prides itself as serving and highlighting the “enlightened” public who are not fascists, racists, apartheidists and what not. It is solidly anti-government. So much so, that Menachem Begin once quipped, “the last time Haaretz published a pro-government editorial was when the British Mandate still existed.

On Thursday, April 26, the news leaked out of the tragedy of the hikers at Nahal Tzafit, south-west of the Dead Sea. Early information noted that the students were from a pre-army academy, or Mechina Kdam-Tzvait. As it happens, these “gap year’ educational institutions were initiated by religious Zionist circles to strengthen those in Jewish knowledge who had no intention of continuing their higher Bible and Talmudic studies and who were very serious of not only becoming a soldier in the IDF but becoming officers.

The First Report site run by Evgeny Zarovinsky noticed that since the specific academy had not been identified, many who were leaving comments at the Hebrew web site of the newspaper had assumed the swept-away youngsters were either religious or, “worse”, residents of Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria. He was astonished and pained at their content.

He posted a screenshot.




A sample of what “thinking people” think:



1.  The IDF does not need idiots…better these people do not enlist.

2.  God should save them. No, he shouldn’t really and not at the expense of the taxpayer either.

3.  Is this another national-religious adventure? Well, not to worry, now for certain the Rabbis will pray for them.

4.  They trusted in He Above, so let Him take care of them.

5.  What, God didn’t warn them about the dangers of the weather?

6.  The graduates of the pre-military academies bring with them to the IDF their idiocy and posing which gets us all in trouble.

7.  You should only know how much we hate you since Rabin’s murder.

8.  You religious people, you’re not forever protected. The next wave is coming.

9.  That’s what happens when you depend on someone who doesn’t exist.


I do not know if this is a representative sampling and it would be unfair to suggest so. As pseudonyms were used, I do not know if these are separate persons or one perhaps psychopath.

Nevertheless, someone felt “at home” at Haaretz and presumed he was “following the line”. And that he could post such trash with little impunity.

This type of thinking is not thoughtful. It is hateful ranting. And it is assisted by the opinions of its columnists Gideon Levy, Amira Hass, Bradley Burton, Chemi Shalev, Uri Misgav and Rogel Alpher.

How unfortunate for us.

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1 comment:

Viator said...

Seeing you as a representative of the Jews who were persecuted in last couple of centuries then I sympathize. I grew up on Holocaust movies so I sympathize a lot. I felt so bad for the people unjustly hunted and killed like animals. And I did so for most if not all of my adult life. Then I learned of how the state of Israel was treating the minority called Palestinians. And my mindset suddenly changed to that of outrage. I believe the State of Israel can do nothing more powerful to ensure it's existence than to give PRIORITY service to it's minorities. Give better shools, tax breaks, whatever to those of non Jewish decent and loose the comparison to S-Africa.