by Yair Altman
Reservists to distribute copies of pamphlet containing selection of articles and columns from Haaretz newspaper that portray Israel as evil and are used by the BDS movement to justify its campaign to boycott Israel and isolate it internationally.
| 
                                            Anti-Israel material put out
 by the BDS movement features a column by Haaretz writer Gideon Levy    
                                      | 
The IDF reservists group Reservists at the 
Front is taking aim at the Haaretz newspaper as part of its new campaign
 against the international boycott movement against Israel, which 
launches on Wednesday. 
The campaign will distribute 20,000 copies of a
 publication similar in design to Haaretz, containing a selection of 
anti-Israel articles published by that newspaper. The items featured 
include calls by Haaretz publisher Amos Schocken to the international 
community to pressure Israel; headlines such as "Israel is an evil 
state"; "Human beasts, child killers"; and "Judeo-Nazis," and columns by
 Gideon Levy and other writers. The pamphlet bears the slogan: "Stay in 
Israel, leave Haaretz behind," which in the original Hebrew is a play on
 words. 
According to Reservists at the Front, Haaretz 
has become a mouthpiece for hateful propaganda against the State of 
Israel and the IDF. The group argues that supporters of the Boycott, 
Divestment and Sanctions movement frequently use reports and items from 
the paper to demonize Israel. 
"The BDS [movement] often uses these articles,
 and it's important that the public know that," explains Maj. Amit Deri 
(ret.), chairman of Reservists at the Front. 
"For example, one Gideon Levy column titled 
'Stop Living in Denial, Israel is an Evil State' was quoted by [BDS] 
groups as 'from Israeli media.' They write that Israelis themselves 
admit to being evil; they don't need to analyze it. The words speak for 
themselves," Deri said. 
Members of Reservists at the Front planned to 
distribute the pamphlets at railway stations and the central bus station
 in Tel Aviv and the Mahane Yehuda market in Jerusalem. The activists 
planned to ask passersby about their opinions on the articles and how 
they thought the articles reflected the reality of life in Israel.
      Yair Altman
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=35433&hp=1
Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the aut
No comments:
Post a Comment