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New York Times drops repeat contributor who called for the genocide of Jews
In response to pressure by media watchdog Honest Reporting, the New York Times ended its relationship with repeat contributor Fady Hanona on August 12. This comes after revelations that the Gaza Strip-based freelance producer and fixer had not only advanced anti-Semitic tropes and rhetoric, but called for violence in a number of instances.
Hanona contributed to the paper's reporting on the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians right up until his August dismissal.
Honest Reporting, which is run by former chief political correspondent at the Jerusalem Post Gil Hoffman, recently drew attention both to Hanona's contributions to the New York Times, the BBC, the Guardian, and VICE News and to some of the political views he has expressed online.
Akiva Van Koningsveld documented a number of cases in which the New York Times' former freelancer advocated violence against Israelis and supported those who have committed grievous crimes. In one instance, Hanona threatened to murder Ghassan Alian, who had been commander of the Israeli Defense Forces' Golani Brigade.
StopAntisemitism.org, alerted to Hanona's history of hateful rhetoric online by Honest Reporting, highlighted another one of the comments he made on his now-deleted social media, here suggesting that he wouldn't be upset with killing Jews.
\u201c"the Jews are sons of dogs and I am with killing them, and burning them like Hitler did to them (smiley face)" - Fady Hossam Hanona\n\nThis Hitler praising antisemite covers the Israel/Palestinian conflict for the NY Times, Guardian, and VICE News.\u201d— StopAntisemitism (@StopAntisemitism) 1660231847
On August 10, 2014, Hanona quoted Adolf Hitler, writing: "As Hitler said, give me a Palestinian soldier and a German weapon and I will make Europe crawl on its knees, Israel will submit." Eight days later, Hanona reportedly urged the Palestinian guerillas to reject a truce and to "continue hitting Tel Aviv and return to clash from point zero."
Koningsveld emphasized that Hanona is "entitled to his personal views, however ignorant and distasteful they may be." Honest Reporting's interest in the matter is that Hanona has and continues to act as a fixer for foreign media organizations and personnel.
The Times of Israel noted that fixers, such as Hanona, help foreign journalists and news organizations coordinate logistics and provide translation.
According to Koningsveld, a politically motivated personality like Hanona "can be selective with the information [he feeds] the journalist or, at worst, mistranslate the words of interview subjects." The media watchdog is concerned, ultimately, that someone who has involved himself in the causes he helps others report on will result in "skewed news coverage about the Arab-Israeli conflict."
CNN's Christiane Amanpour blasted for comparing Trump's term to Nazis' Kristallnacht: 'Disgusting'
CNN International anchor Christiane Amanpour compared President Donald Trump's four years in office to the Nazis' Kristallnacht. After Amanpour made the comparison of President Trump's first term to the campaign of terror against Jewish people in 1938, the CNN International segment from Thursday was characterized as "despicable" and "disgusting."
"This week 82 years ago, Kristallnacht happened," Amanpour said on her interview TV show. "It was the Nazis' warning shot across the bow of our human civilization that led to genocide against a whole identity and, in that tower of burning books, it led to an attack on fact, knowledge, history and truth.
"After four years of a modern-day assault on those same values by Donald Trump, the Biden-Harris team pledges a return to normal," she said as images of wrecked storefronts and a book burning were displayed on her show "Amanpour." "And every day Joe Biden makes presidential announcements about good governance and the health and security of the American people, while the great, brooding figure of his defeated opponent rages, conducting purges of perceived enemies and preventing a transition."
This is @camanpour on @CNN comparing Trump’s tenure to Nazi Germany. How the hell is this sort of prejudice to… https://t.co/vHe3KE6drY— Ben Habib (@Ben Habib)1605208223.0
Kristallnacht, the "Night of Broken Glass," was the two-day onslaught on Jews in Germany that began on the night of Nov. 9, 1938. "Over 250 synagogues were burned, over 7,000 Jewish businesses were trashed and looted, dozens of Jewish people were killed, and Jewish cemeteries, hospitals, schools, and homes were looted while police and fire brigades stood by," according to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
"The morning after the pogroms 30,000 German Jewish men were arrested for the 'crime' of being Jewish and sent to concentration camps, where hundreds of them perished. Some Jewish women were also arrested and sent to local jails. Businesses owned by Jews were not allowed to reopen unless they were managed by non-Jews. Curfews were placed on Jews, limiting the hours of the day they could leave their homes."
There was a wave of backlash against Amanpour on Twitter.
StopAntisemitism.org reacted to the segment by saying, "Hey @CNN@camanpour please stop using the horrors of the Holocaust to justify an agenda. Our suffering is not yours to play political ping pong with."
StopAntisemitism.org is a self-described organization "that works to hold antisemites accountable and to create consequences for their bigoted actions by exposing the threat that they present to all Americans and showing how their ideologies conflict with American values, morals, and principles."
Hey @CNN @camanpour please stop using the horrors of the Holocaust to justify an agenda.Our suffering is not your… https://t.co/URi1h68Pg8— StopAntisemitism.org (@StopAntisemitism.org)1605274036.0
The Orthodox Jewish Public Affairs Council called Amanpour's comparison "despicable."
"@camanpour compares verbal fact checking of a POTUS to a Nazi pogrom in which dozens of Jews were murdered. Amanpour uses the book burning of Kristallnacht to reach this comparison thus ignoring the overall deadliness and human cost of the night," the Council tweeted.
"This is not the 'typical' comparison of a political figure to Hitler or Nazism which is sadly done too often. @camanpour took a verbal fact checking thing about a politician and compared it to a specific violent and deadly event (Kristallnacht) by the Nazis."
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said, "A glimpse of what so many of the people who control large corporations, the media and Hollywood really think. That the over 72 million Americans who voted for Trump are supporters of the modern day equivalent of Nazi's."
Boris Epshteyn, a strategic adviser for the Trump campaign, wrote, "DISGUSTING demeaning of the Holocaust by @camanpour, @CNN. How far the left goes to wrongfully attack @realDonaldTrump is depraved. Will @cnn do the right thing?"
Sohrab Ahmari, New York Post opinion editor, replied, "@camanpour: I'm ashamed to have to count you an Iranian compatriot. This is a grotesque abuse of history, a horrific, ahistorical equivalence-drawing, a shameful cheapening of the Shoah."
Richochet editor Bethany Mandel told Fox News, "It's disgusting, though not surprising, that a major media figure would use dead Jews as a way to make a cheap political point.
"It is something progressives have done for a long time, disgracing the memory of those who have passed in the Holocaust in order to make a false accusation against the United States president," Mandel continued. "It seems the only time many people care about anti-Semitism is when they can use it to their political advantage."
Last week, Amanpour compared Trump to former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad by saying, "A reflection on President Trump's comments last night: The last President I covered who refused to accept the vote count in an election was Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Iran, 2009."
A reflection on President Trump’s comments last night: The last President I covered who refused to accept the vot… https://t.co/Gwdn7IPDT4— Christiane Amanpour (@Christiane Amanpour)1604645210.0