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----- Original Message ----- From: <hweissler@...> To: <TeaneckShulsChat@...> Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2001 12:58 PM Subject: [TeaneckShulsChat] Fwd: Check out The real picture It's an urban legend.
Jonathan Marks discusses it in this week's Jewish Week, "Tragedies Real and Imagined: Herzl's children and the myth of phantom e-mails".
We have enough legitimate gripes against the media, including Reuters. (Their photographs and captions are often misleading and manipulative -- see CAMERA's "Reuters photos pictures of bias" at .)
But we weaken our case when we spread misinformation. If you've circulated this to others, please retract.
zvi
P.S. Here's an excerpt from Marks' article ( ):
One of the great phenomenons arising out of the confluence of politics and the Internet has been the phantom e-mails, unattributable information from obscure sources, that are forwarded around the world and, too often, accepted as fact.
Among Zionists, these phantom e-mails often take the form of complaints about the media's bias against Israel. The most recent example is the deluge of e-mails we've received about a pair of photographs that are said to have been "widely distributed" for the sake of Palestinian propaganda.
In the first photo, an Arab boy is seen in the far distance throwing a rock. In the second photo, the boy is arrested, looking up in terror at his Israeli soldier-captors, supposedly having "wet his trousers," according to the caption. We're told that the "biased" media only ran the picture of the little boy under arrest, not the one of him throwing a rock.
How do these things get started? This campaign was the product of Politics Now, a Hebrew-language Israeli political portal and Web magazine run by Yossi Shturm, 39, who told The Jewish Week he's the former chair of the student union at Tel-Aviv University, and later the National Union of Israeli Students, before working in the press and communications division of the Jewish Agency and striking out on his own.
Shturm says the photo campaign began on April 7, when he received an e-mail from an Israeli in Japan containing the picture of the arrested Palestinian child, with a note saying that the picture came from a Palestinian source.
No, both photos were taken by Reuter's photographers, the one of the rock throwing by Evelyn Hockstein; the one of the arrest by Natalie Behring. The pictures can be seen by going to the photos search on Yahoo! news section and looking up the photographers by name.
The photo of the arrested child inspired compassion, said a worried Shturm. In an e-mail interview, he said that when he saw the photo a second time
in a Web discussion group, "I felt that the Palestinians are starting a media campaign."
In fact, the only media campaign was Shturm's. When questioned, Shturm could not name one newspaper that used these pictures. All he could cite was a mention of the picture by Yediot Ahronot (April 10), but Yediot did not use the picture itself.
Shturm posted the two pictures on Politics Now, and warned that the media was using one picture, but not of the boy throwing rocks. The form-letter e-mails to us said that here was "The picture [of the arrested Arab boy] that moved hearts. ? Be amazed at the TRUTH regarding media treatment of the Palestinian war against Israel.... Undoubtedly, this picture is very moving, and everyone can share the pain and panic of the child, that led to such an embarrassing moment [of the wet trousers]. The Palestinians, who truly understand the power of the image, spread this picture worldwide [but] they did not show the other picture [that] was not as widely distributed."
Although the initial Reuter's caption on April 6 says the Arab boy "wets his trousers" when arrested, that supposition was soon edited out by Reuter's. The boy's pants were clearly mucked up, but throwing rocks in the dust and mud is mucky business. But while Reuter's edited that out within hours, in later sendings of the pictures, Shturm and his e-mail army did not reflect the changed caption. The e-mails sent visitors to Shturm's Politics Now site, not to Reuter's or Yahoo!, where the change could be seen.
All in all, the episode was a storm warning about a storm that never was, reflecting a Jewish mood that takes bias for granted, is convinced that the Arabs are publicity geniuses, and that our fears are the same as fact. None of that, in this case, was true.
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