[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference taveng::bagels

Title:BAGELS and other things of Jewish interest
Notice:1.0 policy, 280.0 directory, 32.0 registration
Moderator:SMURF::FENSTER
Created:Mon Feb 03 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1524
Total number of notes:18709

891.0. "Some facts on Intifada for all the TV viewers out there" by TALLIS::GOYKHMAN (Nostalgia ain't what it used to be) Fri Feb 23 1990 00:00

	(reprinted w/out permission from Wall Street Journal, Feb. 21, 1990)





	THE INTIFADA YOU DON'T SEE ON TV



	Nearly one-third of all Palestinians killed last year in the West Bank
and Gaza were murdered by fellow Palestinians . Palestinian death squads roam
the West Bank and Gaza, torturing and executing not only "collaborators", but
also political rivals, moderators, criminals and women they consider promiscuous
The annual human rights report from the State Department scheduled for release
today might be expected to mention those facts. It does not. While the report
devotes some 13 detailed pages to Israeli human rights abuses, it can spare just
four paragraphs for Palestinian human rights abuses.
	Perhaps the State Department has been watching too much television. It
is from television that most Americans get their image of the intifada. And the
US networks have been complicit in a massive deception about the West Bank 
conflict.
	US reporters have acquiesced in Palestinian control over what gets
filmed. "Fundamentalist groups never allowed us in certain areas of Gaza" says
Amos Aynor, an Israeli crewman who has worked for CBS. Tali Goder, an Israeli
cameraman who has also worked for the US networks is even more blunt:"Every
time a crew came to film the Palestinians, the rule was 'Once you are here, you
will cover what we want. You will not dig too much.' We know that if we aim the
camera at the wrong scene, we'll be dead."
	These apprehensions are not unrealistic. A November CBS story about
death squads in Arab town of Nablus was one of the few television pieces to show
the reign of terror imposed by the Palestinian gangs. Soon afterwards, Israeli
troops raided the casbah, killing several gang members and capturing others
alive. The Israeli Army passed a warning to CBS bureau chief, Micheal Rosenblum,
that radical Palestinians had issued a death threat against the CBS crew. CBS
did not report the warning.

		NOT NEWSWORTHY

	If reports of threats by the Palestinian gangs against a network's own
crew are not newsworthy, it is perhaps unsurprising that other sorts of 
Palestinian violence have been ignored. Since the beginning of the uprising
in December 1987, more than 175 Palestinians have been killed by fellow
Palestinians. More than 25 have been burnt to death, another 20 have been
strangled, lynched or suffocated; and others have been decapitated, dismembered,
and otherwise mutilated. More recently, the ears of the "collaborators" have
been cut off. Israeli soldiers have killed 25 Palestinians in Gaza since
September; Palestinian gangs have killed 47 Palestinians, according to Israeli
military sources.
	Israeli officials admit that one-third of the Palestinians killed by
other Palestinians have assisted the authorities; the rest are people considered
"impure" by the leaderships of the West Bank gangs or are people who have merely
done business with the Jews. In October, a Palestinian father of seven was
knifed to death in Jericho for "collaboration". He had sold floral decorations
to religious Jews building a ritual Succah.
	"Death sentences" are kangaroo court killings by Palestinian gangs made
up of classical juvenile delinquents and social outcasts who have found a
legitimate way to kill. Homosexuals are frequent targets. Women who wear "too
much" makeup or short skirts have been raped or burned with acid, if not killed
outright. Yet in the more than 150 stories filed by US networks from the West
Bank last year, only half a dozen focused on the internecine killing of 
Palestinians by other Palestinians.
	Amnesty International found the killing of Palestinians by other
Palestinians so disturbing that in November it issued a strong condemnation of
the"killing of alleged collaborators", noting that many had been "interrogated
and tortured" by "special squads of Palestinians". Furthermore, Amnesty said,
"Palestinian leaders have endorsed or failed to condemn the killing of 
collaborators."
	Documents intercepted by the Israeli intelligence - and whose
authenticity has been confirmed by the Palestinians themselves - indicate that
the Palestine Liberation Organization approves and directs the killings of other
Palestinians.
	While Palestinian political terror on the West Bank has failed to make
the news, utter fabrications about Israeli brutality are reported uncritically.
At the beginning of the intifada, for example, the US networks were called to
el-Mokkasad hospital in Jerusalem to film a dying 15-year old Palestinian boy
named Rami el Aluk. His Palestinian doctor showed the boy hooked up to life
support tubes, and claimed that he was savagely beaten by Israeli troops.
	The networks gave the story wide publicity. On Feb 8, 1988, Peter
Jennings introduced ABC's piece by announcing, "In the Middle East today, United
Nations officials say that the Israelis have beaten another Palestinian to death
in the occupied territories." CBS said the boy has "received a blow to his head"
and then quoted his doctor:"I think he will die soon". NBC reported on a 
"doctor's helplessness and a father's despair as this 15-year old dies of head
injuries received in a riot."
	But the story wasn't true.
	According to the pathology records of Rami's autopsy and other medical
records, the boy died of a cerebral hemorrhage caused by high blood pressure.
He had been sick for more than a year.
	Another example is the story of Amjad Hussein Jabril, a 14-year old 
Palestinian-American. He was found shot to death in El-Bireh on the West Bank
last August. CNN quoted Palestinians charging that the boy had been lost with
Israeli soldiers. When his body was found, it showed signs of torture and
mutilation.
	Despite the army's denials, the State Department pressured the Israeli
government into a formal investigation. The family refused to turn over the
corpse, so the army exhumed the body. An independent Swedish pathologist 
selected by the boy's family performed the autopsy. No evidence was found of
any torture whatsoever. Amjad had died of a single gunshot wound in the back -
from a low-calibre, low velocity gun. The Israeli Army regularly uses military
high-velocity rifle and high-calibre pistols.
	The autopsy records for these and other Palestinian killings are kept
in the Institute for Forensic Medicine, in Jaffa. After reviewing a number of
the reports, I asked its director Dr Yehuda Hiss whether any American reporters
had ever come to interview him. "None." Even human rights organizations have
not bothered to ask for his files. The International League for Human Rights
sent two lawyers to interview him on an investigation into Israeli brutality.
But, Dr. Hiss said, "they came without any lists or names and left after an
hour".
	The networks prefer to get at the truth by more dubious means. In the
past year they have handed out at least 15, and perhaps as many as 25, Super-8
video cameras to Palestinians. These "cameramen" make their videos on their
own, and provide the networks with footage of riots, strikes and funerals.
The cameras, according to a senior American television newsman "were distributed
to the Palestinians on the basis that they bring us action. But I would be lying
to you if I didn't admit the whole thing makes me uneasy."
	Asked about the practice of providing videocameras to Palestinians, ABC
spokesman Scott Richardson said,"ABC will not confirm or deny that we give our
cameras to the Palestinians. However our general policy in the world is that 
from time to time, we have given our equipment to local citizens for safety,
legal or political considerations."
	In fact, except for Eastern Europe - where fewer than five cameras were
given out and each only for a limited period - the networks have distributed
cameras nowhere else in the world.
	Because few if any American television journalists speak Arabic, it is
only natural that the networks seek out Palestinians who speak the language and
who can help supply stories. But according to the Israeli court records, many of
the Palestinian journalists on staff or consultants to the American networks
are active participants in the intifada. There is absolutely no way to insure
the authenticity of what is filmed nor is there any way to stop the cameras 
from being used as a tool to mobilize a demonstration.
	"Cameras don't lie" is the familiar refrain issued by reporters when
confronted  with criticism about their coverage. And there is no disputing that
cameras have shown Israeli soldiers viciously beating and shooting the
Palestinians, sometimes without justification.
	ABC News broadcast in December footage showing Israeli troops wounding
"Palestinian stone throwers" without firing warning shots, contradicting the
Israeli Army version of the episode. The Israeli Army later suspended the troops.

	STRICT GUIDELINES

	Yet the networks also realize that cameras can distort events. It is not
well-known, but each network has strict guidelines that are supposed to guide
the use of cameras in civil disturbances.
	CBS Production Standards, which are typical of those used by every
network, say that "if your presence is clearly inspiring, continuing or 
intensifying a dangerous, or potentially dangerous disturbance, cap your cameras
and conceal your microphones regardless of what other organizations may do".
	Furthermore, the guidelines warn reporters not to report "as factual,
rumors, 'eyewitness' reports or statements by participants unless and until 
their accuracy has been separately and authoritatively confirmed".
	In practice, television crew members concede, the guidelines are
ignored. "When cameras are taken out, the crowd performs for us. The Palestinians
know we are their lifeline," says Mr. Aynor. And the guidelines are good until
your competitor gets the story you didn't. Then, it's get the story at all costs
forget the guidelines." ABC, in its guidelines, says it "would rather miss a
story than mis-report it." If only ABC, or the other networks, truly meant what
it said.


	[ Mr. Emerson, formerly an editor at U.S. News and World Report, is the
author of "Secret Warriors: Inside the Covert Military Operations of the Reagan
Era," (Putnam, 1988.)]
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
891.1most grateful for your articleGVA05::ULLMANNFri Feb 23 1990 09:244
    Many thanks for your good idea because in Europe we have not this
    kind event related in the newpapers.
    Chalom
    
891.2KYOA::SCHORRFri Feb 23 1990 16:4918
    You can kill you and we can kill us but you'd better not kill us and
    we'd better not kill you.
    
    There seems to be a psychological phenomena at work here and I don't
    understand it.  It's OK for intra-group/Nationality to commit
    murder and other atrocities but not inter-group violence.  How else
    can we explain the lack of world response for the internal fighting
    within Lebanon.  Especially recently when one major Christian faction
    was fighting another.  When the Palestinians where perceived as
    killing Israelis then they where bad, When they kill fellow
    Palestinians that's OK.  We all know abhor what is going on in South
    Africa, but there are Other African Governments/Factions that aren't
    much better in their treatment of their people and nobody says a thing. 
    Is it any more moral for someone to persecute one's own race/countryman?
    
    Is there anyone out there who can make sense of this for me?
    
    
891.3Sympathetic Time ArticleUSEM::ROSENZWEIGFri Feb 23 1990 17:3524
    Note that this week an editorial on the back inside pages of TIME
    magazine was quite sympathetic to Israel.  Among other things, it
    said that Israel was the only democracy of its kind in the Mid-East
    and was judged much more harshly than its neighbors in quelling
    disturbances.  Examples were cited about the Arab neighbors putting
    down resistance much more cruelling, yet no mention was made of
    these examples including scores or resisters  in any newspapers.
    The writer hypothetically asked what America would do if people
    of a certain ethnic background (I believe it was Mexican?) suddenly
    began to violently demand that certain lands be given back to them,
    vowed to drive Americans into the sea, and began arming in neighboring
    countries to overthrow us...also did not recognize America the right
    to exist.    What would America as a democracy do to keep itself
    alive?
    
    I am sorry I no longer have the two page article and am writing
    this from memory.
    
    It seems as if another side is beginning to be reported in mainstream
    American papers.  Hopefully more understanding is on the way.
    
   Perhaps some one else who saw the article can add more about it.
    
    RR 
891.4SeenSUTRA::LEHKYI'm phlegmatic, and that's cool.Mon Mar 05 1990 17:5010
    I did read it in:
    
    - LeMonde and Liberation (French)
    - Salzburger Nachrichten (Austria)
    
    And it was about half-page editorials, each.
    
    Informedly yours,
    
    Chris
891.5Here is the piece from TIME -- worth readingTAV02::FEINBERGDon FeinbergTue Mar 06 1990 09:28220





                                   Judging Israel





                                Charles Krauthammer





                      (Reprinted without permission from TIME)







      Jews are news.  It is an axiom of journalism.  An  indispensable  axiom,

      too,  because  it  is  otherwise impossible to explain why the deeds and

      misdeeds of the dot-on-the-map Israel get an  absurdly  disproportionate

      amount  of  news  coverage around the world.  If you are trying to guess

      how much coverage any Middle East event received and you  are  permitted

      but  one  question,  the  best  question you can ask about the event is:

      Were there any Jews in the vicinity?



           The paradigmatic case is the  page  in  the  "International  Herald

      Tribune"  that  devoted  seven  of  its eight columns to the Palestinian

      uprising.   Among  the  headlines:   "Israeli  Soldier  Shot  to  Death;

      Palestinian  Toll  Rises to 96." The eighth column carried a report that

      5,000 Kurds died in an Iraqi gas attack.



           Whatever the reason, it is a  fact  that  the  world  is  far  more

      interested  in  what  happens  to  Jews  than to Kurds.  It is perfectly

      legitimate, therefore, for journalists to give  the  former  more  play.

      But  that  makes it all the more incumbent to be fair in deciding how to

      play it.



           How SHOULD Israel be judged?  Specifically, should Israel be judged

      by  the  moral standards of its neighborhood, or by the standards of the

      West?  The answer, unequivocally, is:  the standards of the  West.   But

      the issue is far more complicated than it appears.



           The first complication is that although the  neighborhood  standard

      ought  not  to  be  Israel's,  it cannot be ignored when judging Israel.

      Why?  It is plain  that  compared  with  the  way  its  neighbors  treat

      protest,  prisoners,  and  opposition  in general, Israel is a beacon of

      human rights.  The salient words are Hama, the town  where  Syria  dealt

      with  an  Islamic uprising by killing perhaps 20,000 people in two weeks

      and then paving the dead over; and Black September (1970), during  which

      the enlightened Jordan dealt with its Palestinian intifada by killing at

      least 2,500 Palestinians in 10 days, a toll that  the  Israeli  intifada

      would need 10 years to match.



           Any moral judgment must take into account the alternative.   Israel

      cannot  stand  alone,  and  if  it  is  abandoned by its friends for not

      meeting Western standards of morality, it will die.  What  will  replace

      it?  The neighbors:  Syria, Jordan, the PLO, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Ahmed

      Jabril, Abu Nidal (if he is still around) or some combination  of  these

      -- an outcome that will induce acute nostalgia for Israel's human-rights

      record.


                                                                Page 2





           Any moral judgement that refuses to  consider  the  alternative  is

      merely  irresponsible.   That  is  why  Israel's  moral  neighborhood is

      important.  It is not just the neighborhood, it is the alternative, and,

      if  Israel  perishes,  the  future.  It is morally absurd, therefore, to

      reject Israel for failing to meet Western standards of human rights when

      the  consequence of that rejection is to consign the region to neighbors

      with considerably less regard for human rights.



           Nevertheless, Israel cannot be judged by the moral standards of the

      neighborhood.   It is part of the West.  It bases much of its appeal for

      Western support on shared values, among which is  a  respect  for  human

      rights.  The standard for Israel must be Western standards.



           But what exactly does "Western standards" mean?  Here  we  come  to

      complication  number  2.   There is not a single Western standard, there

      are two:  what we demand of Western countries  at  peace,  and  what  we

      demand  of  Western  countries at war.  It strains not just fairness but

      also logic to ask Israel, which has known only war  for  its  40  years'

      existence, to act like a Western country at peace.



           The  only  fair  standard  is  this  one:   How  have  the  Western

      democracies   reacted   in   similar  conditions  of  war,  crisis,  and

      insurrection?  The morally relevant comparison is not with  an  American

      police  force  reacting to violent riots, say, in downtown Detroit.  The

      relevant comparison is with Western democracies at war:  to, say, the US

      during  the Civil War, the British in Mandatory Palestine, the French in

      Algeria.



           When  Western  countries  have  been  in  conditions  approximating

      Israel's,  when  they  have faced comparable rebellions, they have acted

      not very differently.



           We do not even have to go back to Lincoln's Civil War suspension of

      "habeas  corpus",  let  alone Sherman's march through Georgia.  Consider

      that during the last Palestinian intifada, the Arab Revolt  of  1936-39,

      the  British  were  in  charge  of  Palestine.  They put down the revolt

      "without mercy, without qualms", write Middle East scholar Fouad  Ajami.

      Entire  villages  were razed.  More than 3,000 Palestinians were killed.

      In 1939 alone, the British hanged 109.  (Israel has no death penalty.)



           French  conduct  during  the  Algerian  war  was  noted   for   its

      indiscriminate  violence  and systematic use of torture.  In comparison,

      Israel has been positively restrained.   And  yet  Israel  faces  a  far

      greater  threat.  All the Algerians wanted, after all, was independence.

      They were not threatening the extinction of France.  If Israel  had  the

      same  assurance as France that its existence was in no way threatened by

      its enemies, the whole Arab-Israeli conflict could  have  been  resolved

      decades ago.



           Or consider  more  contemporary  democracies.   A  year  ago,  when

      rioting  broke out in Venezuela over government-imposed price increases,

      more than 300 were killed in less than one week.  In 1984, the  army  of

      democratic India attacked rebellious Sikhs in the Golden Temple, killing

      300 in ONE  DAY.   And  yet  these  democracies  were  not  remotely  as

      threatened as Israel.  Venezuela was threatened with disorder; India, at


                                                                Page 3





      worst, with secession.  The Sikhs have never pledged to throw India into

      the sea.



           "Israel", opines "The Economist", "cannot in fairness  test  itself

      against  a  standard set by China and Algeria while still claiming to be

      part of the West." This argument,  heard  all  the  time,  is  a  phony.

      Israel  asks  to be judged by the standard not of China and Algeria, but

      of Britain and France, of Venezuela and India.  By  that  standard,  the

      standard  of democracies facing similar disorders, Israel's behavior has

      been measured and restrained.



           Yet Israel has been treated as if this were not true.   The  thrust

      of  reporting  and,  in  particular,  the  commentary is that Israel has

      failed dismally to meet Western standards, that it has been particularly

      barbaric in its treatment of the Palestinian uprising.  No other country

      is repeatedly subjected to Nazi analogies.  In no other country  is  the

      death  or  deportation of a single rioter the subject (as it was for the

      first year of the intifada, before it became a media bore) of front page

      news,  of  emergency  Security-Council meetings, of full page ads in the

      "New York Times", of pained editorials about Israel's lost soul, etc.



           Why is that so?  Why is it that of Israel a standard of behavior is

      demanded  that is not just higher than its neighbors', not just equal to

      that of the West, but in fact  far  higher  than  that  of  any  Western

      country in similar circumstances?



           For most, this double  standard  is  unconscious.   Critics  simply

      assume  is  appropriate  to  compare  Israel  with a secure and peaceful

      America.  They ignore the fact that  there  are  two  kinds  of  Western

      standards,  and that fairness dictates subjecting Israel to the standard

      of a Western country at war.



           But other critics openly demand higher  behavior  from  the  Jewish

      state  than  from  other  states.   Why?   Jews, it is said, have a long

      history of oppression.  Thus, they have  a  special  vocation  to  avoid

      oppressing  others.   This  dictates  a  higher standard in dealing with

      others.



           Note that this reasoning is  applied  only  to  Jews.   When  other

      people  suffer -- Vietnamese, Algerians, Palestinians, the French Maquis

      -- they are usually allowed a grace period during which they are  judged

      by  a  somewhat lower standard.  The victims are, rightly or wrongly (in

      my view, wrongly), morally indulged.  A kind of moral affirmative action

      applies.   We  are  asked  to understand the former victims' barbarities

      because of how they themselves suffered.  These has, for  example,  been

      little  attention  to,  and  less  commentary  on,  the 150 Palestinians

      lynched by other Palestinians during the intifada.  How many  know  that

      this   year  as  many  Palestinians  have  died  at  the  hands  of  the

      Palestinians as at the hands of the Israelis?



           With Jews, that kind of reasoning is  reversed:   Jewish  suffering

      does  not  entitle them to more leeway in trying to prevent a repetition

      of their tragedy, but to less.  Their suffering requires them,  uniquely

      among the worlds sufferers, to bend over backwards in dealing with their

      enemies.


                                                                Page 4





           Sometimes it seems as if Jews are entitled to protection and  equal

      moral consideration only insofar as they remain victims.  Oriana Fallaci

      once said plaintively to Ariel Sharon, "You are not more the  nation  of

      the  great  dream,  the  country  for  which  we cried." Indeed not:  in

      establishing a  Jewish  state,  the  Jewish  people  made  a  collective

      decision  no  longer  to  be  cried for.  They chose to become actors in

      history, and not its objects.  Historical actors  commit  misdeeds,  and

      they  should be judged like all nation-states when they commit them.  It

      is perverse to argue that, because this particular nation-state is  made

      up  of  people  who  have suffered the greatest crime in modern history,

      they, more than any other people on earth, have a special obligation  to

      be delicate with those who would bring down on them yet another national

      catastrophe.



           That is a double standard.  What does  double  standard  mean?   To

      call it higher standard is simply a euphemism.  That makes it sound like

      a compliment.  In fact, it is a weapon.  If  I  hold  you  to  a  higher

      standard  of  morality  than  others,  I am saying that I am prepared to

      denounce you for things I would never denounce anyone else for.



           If I were to make this kind of judgement about people  of  color  -

      say,  if  it  were  demanded that blacks meet a higher standard in their

      dealings with others, that would be called racism.



           Let's  invent  an  example.   A  city  newspaper  studies  a  white

      neighborhood  and  a  black  neighborhood, and finds that while both are

      messy the black neighborhood is cleaner.  But week  in,  week  out,  the

      paper  runs  front-page  stories  comparing  the  garbage  in  the black

      neighborhood to the pristine loveliness of Switzerland.   Anthony  Lewis

      chips  in  an  op-ed piece deploring, more in sadness than in anger, the

      irony of blacks, who for so long had degradation imposed on them, should

      now impose degradation on themselves.



           Something is wrong here.  To denounce blacks for misdemeanors  that

      we overlook in whites -- that is a double standard.  It is racism.



           The conscious deployment of  a  double  standard  directed  at  the

      Jewish  state  and  at  no  other state in the world, the willingness to

      systematically condemn the  Jewish  state  for  things  others  are  not

      condemned  for -- this is not a higher standard.  It is a discriminatory

      standard.  And discrimination against Jews has a name,  too.   The  word

      for it is anti-Semitism.

891.6CAMERA conferenceRADVAX::WAKYOnward, thru the Fog...Tue Mar 06 1990 21:43159
  (parts of the following reply are reprinted without permission from "The
     Media, The Message and the Middle East Conference Summary/CAMERA)

Although I have been a member of CAMERA for a couple of years, it is only
recently that I have been exposed to some of the local activities of that
organization, and I thought I'd share a bit here in this note; it seems
particularly appropriate (Charles Krauthammer, the author of Mr. Feinberg's
last entry from TIME, is on the National Board of Advisors of CAMERA).

CAMERA - the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America -
"is a non-profit grassroots volunteer organization, composed of Christians
and Jews and devoted exclusively to combatting distortion, misrepresentation
and bias in reporting on Israel and the Middle East.  CAMERA is an apolitical
organization that does not advocate a particular solution to the Mideast 
conflict but seeks only fair and accurate reporting of events"  

Although it has been mentioned in this conference in conjunction with various
articles of interest (see, for example, 644 on the distortion of Mideast 
reporting by the Boston Globe), there hasn't been a lot of exposure.  I'm not
going to do a sell job on the organization here, but will type in articles
of interest if I get response to do so.

The material I'd be most interested in sharing is from the national conference
held recently (Oct '89) in Boston called THE MEDIA, THE MESSAGE AND THE MIDDLE
EAST.  I did not attend myself, though I now wish I had.  However, I have a
collection of summary presentations and have seen a video of many of the
speakers.  I am impressed with most of what I've read, which is why I hope you
will want to share it with me.  Below I have listed the speeches I have which
can be entered in Notes: 


	Introduction to the Conference	by Maxine Wolf

  (Maxine Wolf is Associate Director of the Boston branch of CAMERA)

Speaks to the importance of the media's influence over the public opinion, and
the resultant accountability and responsibility inherent in this role.  Sees
CAMERA as watchdogs calling the media to account that the reporting on the 
Mideast has not been balanced and that this bias can lead to anti-semitism.


	Lament From the Future?		by Norman Podhoretz

  (Norman Podhoretz is the editor-in-chief of Commentary magazine)

Primarily discusses the true aims of the PLO, as their charter, their speeches,
and their terrorist behavior show.  He paints a "what if" scenario based on the
implementation of a Palestinian state on the West Bank and Gaza.


	The Boston Globe: A study in Press Bias		by Andrea Levin

  (Andrea Levin is Executive Director of the Boston branch of CAMERA)

Ms. Levin's presentation of the Globe problem was very well written up in 644.
[I attended a lecture on this subject recently, and the actual slides with
pictures and visual capture of article size/distortion is really more than the
written word alone can impress.]


	"All the News that's Fit to Print"?  Thomas Friedman and the New York
	Times 		by Jerold Auerbach

  (Jerold Auerbach is Professor of History at Wellesley College)

Analyses Thomas Fiedman's coverage/admitted bias of Mideast coverage when he
worked for the Times, as well as his successors (Joes Brinkley, Anthony Lewis).
Also presents a historical perspective of the Times' record on the Jewish
"superstory" going back to before WWII (an interesting record for a paper owned
by Jews...).


	Romancing the Stones: Network TV Coverage of the Intifada
					by Reuven Koret

  (Reuven Koret is a member of the Boston branch of CAMERA)

"I reviewed every video clip from the evening news broadcasts of ABC, NBC and
CBS that deal with the first year of the intifada.  That's twelve hundred 
minutes in all, more than eight hundred stories, more than any other foreign
event during that period."  This is how his analysis begins.  He goes on to
discuss language ("administered" vs "occupied" territories/ "protestors",
"terrorists"\"soldiers", "youths"...), historical perspective, geography, and 
actual factual inaccuracies.


	Media Bias and Public Policy		by Alan Keyes

  (Alan Keyes is president of Citizens Against Government Waste and is former
  ambassador to the United Nations)

Points to how the issues have shifted from ones of War/Peace to a human 
rights paradigm, to an issue of Palestinian self-government and 
self-determination.  Goes into the reality of human rights situation in the
Arab lands and how this double standard helps to support the "character
assassination of Israel".  Tries to evaluate why this has come to be, and,
most interesting to me, presents his daydream of a Jordanian option of a
consitutional monarchy.



	Inverting History and Events:  The Campaign to Deligitimize Israel
					by Ruth Wisse

  (Ruth Wisse is Professor of Yiddish Literature at McGill University)

How did the Jewish underdogs of the 40's, 50's and 60's turn into the Nazi
opressors of the 80's?  How did the 22 bad Arab nations trying to drive the
Jews to the sea become the Palestinian victims who only want a place to call
their own?  This is a fascinating article which helps us understand the
shift we all feel in public opinion about Isreal and about Jews.


	PBS-WGBH-NPR			by Alan Dershowitz

  (Alan Dershowitz is Professor of Law at Harvard Law School)

In recognizing CAMERA's goals, Mr. Dershowitz says "private media monitoring
and exposing is in the highest tradition of the First Amendment and freedom
of speech....The media want every important institution in this country to be 
scrutinized except the media."  After sharing his disappointment about current
media presentations, he proposes some of the reports he'd like to see on TV.
"...let's see a two-hour report on Palestinian justice..."; "let's see a show
on the true story on the refugees...".  He lists over 20 such ideas.
	
	
	Arab and Jew:  The PBS Teachers' Guide		by Charles Jacobs

  (Charles Jacobs is Deputy Director of the Boston branch of CAMERA)

In discussing the special that PBS ran on David Shipler's book, "Arab and Jew:
Wounded Spirit in the Promised Land", Mr. Jacobs describes how heavily biased
the program's companion teaching materials are.  "The guide is propaganda.  On
every question about the Arab-Jewish conflict, it teaches the Arab position."
"If anti-Semitism is a light sleeper, then PBS has just placed forty thousand
alarm clocks in American school rooms."


	Ominous Echoes			by David Wyman

  (David Wyman is Professor of History at UMASS/Amherst; he is the author
  of "The Abandonment of the Jews")

Mr. Wyman's field of expertise is the American response to the Holocause.  He
speaks to the importance of the State of Israel as a refuge to Jews in time of
trouble and as a legitimizer to the voice of Jews to world forums.  His 
particular point is in reviewing how the media coverage of the horrible news
that began to arrive from Europe in 1942 (practically no coverage...) and the
hyper coverage of today's situation in the Mideast have a common cause -
"[un]intentional...latent anti-Semitism".

(Also, if anyone wants hardcopy of these summaries, send me mail to Social::Waky
with your mail stop, etc...Copies of the Conference Summary itself can be 
purchased through myself or by writing to CAMERA, P.O. BOX 428, Boston, MA.
02258    (617)789-3672)

Waky