Times of Israel..
09 May '13..
Professor Stephen Hawking’s decision to boycott Israel’s President’s Conference left a nasty taste in the mouth. It wasn’t only the fact that the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement was able to claim a significant victory in their campaign to delegitimize Israel. It was also the way in which the story developed throughout the day in such a way as to snatch what looked like a slam dunk exposé of both the BDS movement and The Guardian.
For an Israel advocate, the contradictory information flying around the Internet appeared to present an opportunity to expose anti-Israel bias and misinformation. Thanks to a University of Cambridge statement claiming that Hawking had canceled his trip due to health reasons and not due to political motivations, both The Guardian, which had published the story first, and the boycott movement appeared to be promoting disinformation.
Here was a perfect opportunity to hit back at Israel’s detractors. Indeed, some people were quick off the mark to publish a take-down of those involved in what looked like a false anti-Israel slur.
However, only a few hours later, it was our side that was backing down following the retraction of the University of Cambridge’s original statement and a confirmation that Hawking was, in fact, a boycotter.
HonestReporting prides itself on being among the fastest to respond to media bias issues. We also pride ourselves in holding the media to account when it comes to basic source checking and standards of evidence. After all, how many times has Israel been falsely accused of various crimes and misdemeanors before the facts have been established?
In the case of Hawking, we decided to pause and take stock of all of the conflicting reports floating around. Something just didn’t seem right and just occasionally, a journalist may actually be correct. So we watched and we waited and experienced the same anger and disappointment that so many people felt when it became clear that a much admired public figure had actually thrown in his lot with the boycotters.
Despite this, the balagan still exposed some glaring issues with how this story came to be. Matthew Kalman, the journalist who broke the story in The Guardian explains in the Daily Beast the events of the day and describes his feelings looking at the contradictory University of Cambridge statement (emphasis added):
Twelve hours earlier, I had been told a very different version by officials at the British Committee for the Universities of Palestine (BRICUP). They had published a brief note on Tuesday evening with, they said, the approval of Hawking’s personal assistant announcing his withdrawal from the fifth Facing Tomorrow Presidential Conference. They told me that he had written a brief letter to the Israeli president changing his mind and making his reasons clear in terms that BRICUP described as “his independent decision to respect the boycott, based upon his knowledge of Palestine, and on the unanimous advice of his own academic contacts there.”
So by the journalist’s own admission, he only had the word of an anti-Israel organization for his story. Let’s remind ourselves that the BDS movement has been exposed on numerous occasions making phony claims of victory. Clearly there was a risk involved in publishing a story based solely on the credibility of a BDS organization. Only later did the journalist actually have his written proof in hand to back up his story.
And is it by chance that it was The Guardian who ran with the story? Of course, any story that could damage Israel is an attractive one for a newspaper with a visceral dislike bordering on the obsessive when it comes to reporting on the country.
Of course, the story spread throughout the mainstream media although one aspect caught my eye in the Daily Express, which ran the headline:
"Outrage over disgusting ‘cripple Stephen Hawking’ jokes after he joins boycott of Israel"
However justified we may feel in our anger towards Hawking, there is no justification for attacking him in this offensive and tasteless manner. Having said that, I am still amazed that a mainstream media outlet could consider the rantings of an unrepresentative few as worthy of a story in itself.
Would the Daily Express care to address the regular torrent of offensive remarks that appear in the comments sections of any Israel-related content online, some of which crosses the line into outright anti-Semitism?
I thought not.
Ultimately, while Stephen Hawking has given the BDS movement a shot in the arm, we must not forget that this anti-Israel movement’s failures far outweigh its successes. Clearly, for an intelligent man, Hawking was unable to recognize the real nature of BDS – not a tool to pressure Israel into making concessions for peace but a weapon to bring about Israel’s demise.
We should redouble our efforts to ensure that this should be the story that the media reports the next time BDS breaks out into the mainstream.
Link: http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/stephen-hawkings-media-mess/
Simon Plosker is the Managing Editor of HonestReporting
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I am a Jew but I am sick of seeing everything anyone does turned into antisemitism. It makes us look like nut cases when we scream that they are against us every time someone shares an opinion. Yes I recognize that it exists but sheesh! There are many people, Jews even, that think that "Palestine" and Israel should live in peace and that there must be some sort of compromise. There are sympathizers for the innocent Palestinian civilians and when there is the people must be against the Jews. What utter bull shit.
ReplyDeleteScrew Hawking, he's a racist pig!
ReplyDelete