Download PDF of fact sheet here.
A Blizzard of Lies
This fact sheet is a
response to the campaign of disinformation being waged against the Toronto
International Film Festival (TIFF) protest letter, "The Toronto
Declaration: No Celebration of Occupation,” [1]
signed by 1,000 people including Viggo Mortenson, Danny Glover, Naomi Klein, Harry Belafonte, Wallace Shawn, Eve
Ensler, Jane Fonda along with many Israelis and Palestinians. This year, TIFF decided to put a celebratory
spotlight on Tel Aviv at the festival, in line with the goals of the Israeli
Consulate’s “Brand Israel” program. In its own words, the “Brand Israel”
program aims to publicize Israeli culture in order to distract public attention
from its human rights record. The letter of protest objects to this politicization
of the film festival, saying it is inappropriate given Israel’s nearly 42-year
occupation of the Palestinian Territories, the recent assault and continuing
siege on Gaza, and the history of and ongoing dispossession of Palestinians in
Tel Aviv-Jaffa itself.
Since the release of the
protest letter, public figures and media outlets have spread false charges and
misinformation about the letter, some even going so far as to raise slanderous
accusations against some letter signers.
This fact sheet refutes
three key false charges:
1) That the protest
letter unfairly singles out Israel.
2) That the letter calls
for a boycott of the Film Festival and Israeli films.
3) That the
letter in any way delegitimizes Tel Aviv.
These
charges are all false, as we explain below.
1. THE SIGNERS OF THE TIFF
PROTEST LETTER DID NOT SINGLE OUT ISRAEL. IT WAS TIFF THAT SINGLED OUT ISRAEL
BY SELECTING TEL AVIV FOR A SPECIAL CELEBRATORY HONOR IN A YEAR OF ENORMOUS
PALESTINIAN SUFFERING.
By selecting Tel Aviv for the
inauguration of its City to City program, TIFF became a key player in an
explicit, openly-stated Israeli effort to divert world opinion from ongoing
violations of international law. “We will send well-known novelists and writers
overseas, theatre companies, exhibits,” Arye Mekel, deputy director-general for
cultural affairs for Israel's Foreign Ministry, told The New York Times. “This
way, you show Israel's prettier face, so we are not thought of purely in the
context of war.” [2]
In so doing, TIFF violated the
trust of festival supporters by politicizing the festival, instead of
maintaining political neutrality.
Israel's flirtation with branding
as a solution to the problem of increasing global isolation goes back to 2006
when then Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni announced the new initiative. As Reuters
reported in 2006 [3] :
«After decades of battling to win foreign support for its two-fisted
policies against Arab foes, Israel is trying a new approach with a campaign
aimed at creating a less warlike and more welcoming national image. Foreign
Minister Tzipi Livni, who has argued that the protracted conflict with the
Palestinians is sapping Israel's international legitimacy, this week convened
diplomats and PR executives to come up with ways of “rebranding”
the country. ..The campaign is a departure from the
government's long-held practice of "hasbara", or
"explaining" itself to Western audiences that may have little
sympathy for crackdowns on Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and the Gaza
Strip. Now Israel wants to create an alternative image abroad, focused
exclusively on assets like tourist attractions and business innovations. In the
words of one campaigner and ad executive, the aim would be to create "a
narrative of normalcy".
When Anholt Nation Brands Index
included Israel for the first time [4]
in its annual survey of national brands in 2006, Simon Anholt wrote that
"Israel's brand is, by a considerable margin, the most negative we have
ever measured in the NBI, and comes in at the bottom of the ranking on almost
every question." He surmised that the surprisingly low rankings in all
areas, including Tourism, and Culture and Heritage, were due to the fact that
"if the politics create sufficient disapproval, no area of national
interest is safe from contamination."
While he lauded Israel for recognizing its brand problem, which stemmed largely
from disapproval of its harsh treatment of Palestinians, he cautioned that no
country had ever successfully changed its brand through through "marketing
communications and forms of deliberate propaganda." "This is surely
because," he wrote, "all countries, at some level, get the reputation
they deserve."
Nonetheless, Israel has continued with the program, as reported in the New
York Times [5],
treating global opprobrium as a PR problem rather than a human rights problem.
This strategy was explicitly linked to TIFF
when Israel consul general Amir Gissin announced the launch of a 10-month
branding campaign[6].
“Upon
his posting to Canada last year, Gissin made it clear that his mission was to
“make Israel relevant” to Canadians and use
Toronto as a test market for the Israel brand during his term. The lessons learned from Toronto will inform the
worldwide launch of Brand Israel in the coming years, Gissin said." He
also announced that "plans are in the works for a major Israeli presence
at next year’s Toronto International Film Festival, with numerous Israeli,
Hollywood and Canadian entertainment luminaries on hand."
2 - THE TIFF
PROTEST LETTER CALLS INTO QUESTION THE SINGLING OUT OF ISRAEL FOR SPECIAL
HONORS. IT DOES NOT CALL FOR A BOYCOTT OF THE FESTIVAL.
"The Toronto Declaration: No
Celebration of Occupation" clearly does not call for a boycott. "We
do not protest the individual Israeli filmmakers included in City to
City," it states, "nor do we in any
way suggest that Israeli films should be unwelcome at TIFF." In fact,
TIFF has a long history of including Israeli filmmakers in the festival without
protest. One of the letter’s drafters is Israeli filmmaker Udi Aloni, whose
film Fallen Angel had its premiere at TIFF.
One of the protest letter-signers is Palestinian citizen of Israel filmmaker Elia Suleiman whose
film, The Time that Remains, is featured in this year's festival.
What the signers do object to,
particularly given Israel's widely condemned 22-day military assault on Gaza
this past winter, "is the use of such an important international festival
in staging a propaganda campaign," and in particular, the singling out of
Israel for special reward through the celebratory spotlight on Tel Aviv.
Choosing not to make a specific
demand, the letter aims instead to call attention to a
more accurate history that reflects the stories of both Jews and Palestinians in the
region. The letter's signers are "disturbed" by the decision to
celebrate Tel Aviv in a way that erases the complex history of the city and the
ongoing dispossession of and attacks on Palestinians, none of which is even
mentioned in festival programs and descriptions of the City to City celebration
of Tel Aviv.
Despite the fact that the letter does not
contain a specific call to action, many groups and media outlets repeat the
same lie over and over again about a so-called call for a boycott. One has to
ask, have they actually read the letter? Clearly not.
Alan Dershowitz, “Filmmakers and writers seek to censor
Israeli film,” Jerusalem Post
http://cgis.jpost.com/Blogs/dershowitz
"A group of hard-Left filmmakers and writers from around the world
have been using their celebrity to try to coerce the Toronto International Film
Festival into banning Israeli films....That is why they seek
to close it to views different than theirs. "Speech for me but not for
thee!," is the age-old mantra of censors."
Bnai Brith http://blogs.jta.org/politics/article/2009/09/09/1007747/j-street-bnai-brith-rip-toronto-film-festival-protests
“Several prominent names in the film industry, including Jane Fonda,
Danny Glover, and about 50 others, signed a petition to boycott the
Toronto International Film Festival because of the event’s focus on Tel
Aviv-based film makers.”
Israel Today http://www.israeltoday.co.il/default.aspx?tabid=178&nid=19533
Hollywood stars boycott film festival for
focusing on Tel Aviv: «Hollywood heavyweights Jane Fonda and Danny Glover have
joined a very vocal boycott of the 2009 Toronto Film Festival, which will focus
this year on Tel Aviv and its film industry.»
Talk show host Dennis Prager: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Er3qMyGFqVI
«They have a Toronto film festival and some of the people who have made
films that are there have pulled out because they are showing Israeli films...
and they have asked them not to... a group of actors, authors, musicians and
activists is circulating a letter of protest about a special program at the
Toronto Film festival focusing on Tel Aviv and Israeli culture. The
letter which has been endorsed by the likes of, ready?... Naomi Klein, Jane
Fonda, and Danny Glover ... Of all the countries in the world that should
not be allowed to show a film at a festival. It's Israel.»
Gossip Blogger Perez Hilton http://perezhilton.com/2009-09-04-stars-boycott-toronto-film-festival-due-to-israeli-palestinian-conflict
“Stars Boycott Toronto Film Festival Due To
Israeli-Palestinian Conflict!” (Perez column is source for Ha'aretz coverage)
These reports fail to mention, of course,
that the letter has been signed by Israeli filmmakers like Udi Aloni, Elia Suleiman, Ra'anan
Alexandrowicz, Rachel Leah Jones, Osnat Trabelsi, Eyal Sivan, Shai Carmeli
Pollak, Eran Torbiner, Guy Davidi, Avi Hershkovitz, and Eyal Eithcowich. These
filmmakers obviously are not advocating that they be boycotted. They are
speaking out against their government’s use of art to cleanse its international
image.
3 - THE LETTER RAISES TEL
AVIV'S COMPLEX ROLE IN ISRAEL'S ONGOING DISPOSSESSION OF PALESTINIANS. IT DOES
NOT CALL TEL AVIV'S LEGITIMACY INTO QUESTION.
Nothing in the letter can, in any
way, be understood as saying or even suggesting that Tel Aviv should not exist
as a city. The festival programmers have described Tel Aviv as “a young,
dynamic city that, like Toronto, celebrates diversity.” In response, the letter
points to facts left out of this description, including the well-documented
fact that Palestinians lived on the land that is now Tel Aviv before it was
founded.
What the letter does talk about
is Tel Aviv's history, and referring to established history no more challenges
Tel Aviv's legitimacy than the telling of history of any city or state. What it
does is ask is that we recognize that the story of Tel Aviv, like that of
Israel itself, is complicated by the fact that Palestinians lost their homes,
villages and land to make way for the modern Israeli city, and that the loss of
homes continues in Jaffa today.
Further, many of the false
charges against the letter stem from the claim that it refers to Tel Aviv as
“contested.” This is pure fabrication. Read the letter[7].
The word “contested” does not appear.
As Naomi Klein, one of the
drafters of the declaration said, "Asserting historical facts in no way
argues that Israel should not exist or calls for its destruction. That is an
absurd claim that is being circulated with the express purpose of discrediting
the letter and changing the topic from what is at hand: is this really the
right year for TIFF to celebrate Tel Aviv? The reason we object to the
spotlight is not past events but present day ones -- for instance, the fact
that Tel Aviv, far from being outside the conflict, is the military center of
Israel, a place from which fighter jets departed on their missions to Gaza last
December/January.”
Finally, many of the false
charges against the letter stem from a statement made not by the letter-writers
but rather by TIFF co-director Cameron Bailey, who, as TIFF co-director, is
most decidedly not a co-signer of the protest letter. Indeed, Cameron Bailey
was lauded by Stand With Us for standing by the City to City program. He who
used the term "contested" to describe Tel Aviv, saying in an open
letter, http://www.tiff.net/livefromthefestival/openlettercitytocity, that
spotlighting Tel Aviv was "not a simple choice and that the city remains
contested ground."
Yet once again, numerous sources have
continued to repeat the outright fabrication that the TIFF protest letter
questioned Tel Aviv's legitimacy. It did not. Rabbi Marvin Hier went so far as
to absurdly charge all signers of the letter with seeking the destruction of
the Jewish state. Further, though the letter says people like Archbishop Tutu
have called Israel an apartheid state, it does not use the language directly.
Rabbi Marvin Hier, Simon Wiesenthal Center
http://www.wiesenthal.com/site/apps/nlnet/content2.aspx?c=lsKWLbPJLnF&b=4441467&ct=7459569
"… this is nothing less than a call for the complete
destruction of the Jewish State. There can be no other interpretation when the
legitimacy of Tel Aviv is called into question."
Rabbi Hier’s statement is the
most egregious use of this misinformation, but the advocacy group StandWithUs
and the news outlet the Jewish Telegraphic Agency repeated it, too.
Stand With Us Fact sheet on "The Toronto
Declaration: No Celebration of Occupation," http://www.standwithus.com/app/iNews/view_n.asp?ID=1162
«Tel Aviv is not “contested” ground. No proposed
peace agreements ever envisioned including Tel Aviv, Israel’s second largest
city, in a future Palestinian state.»
Jewish Telegraphic Agency http://blogs.jta.org/telegraph/article/2009/09/03/1007626/toronto-tel-aviv-and-apartheid
"Danny Glover, Jane Fonda and Alice Walker have a problem with a Toronto
film festival celebrating Tel Aviv, which they call "contested
ground" governed by an "apartheid regime”
______________________________________________________________________
About Jewish Voice for Peace
www.jvp.org
Founded in 1996, Jewish Voice for
Peace is a national grassroots peace organization dedicated to promoting a US
foreign policy in the Middle East based on peace, democracy, human rights and
respect for international law. With some 85,000 supporters and members, JVP’s
board of Jewish American and Israeli advisors includes Pulitzer and Tony award
winner Tony Kushner, actor Ed Asner, poet Adrienne Rich, historian Howard Zinn,
singer Ronnie Gilbert as well as other respected rabbis, artists, scholars and
activists.