26 Feb Q & A with Abe Foxman
26.02.06
|
0 Comments
Great interview with Abraham Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League over at the Jerusalem Post. He discusses the Mohammad cartoons, Jewish-Christian relations, anti-Semitism, the movie Munich, and the threat of Iran. Here are a few highlights:
On Cartoons: “Humor definitely can play a useful role in exposing hypocrisy in controversial issues, particularly in getting young people to pay attention. The question is where to draw the line. Holocaust cartoons or a contest of such cartoons, in my view, clearly cross the line…. Ultimately, it still comes down to responsibility and the Holocaust is not a subject for humor. Even the movie “Life is Beautiful” which used humor, did it as a vehicle to protect the child from the reality around him rather than about the Holocaust itself.”
On anti-Semitism: “Jews today, despite the severity of the problems, are not helpless and alone the way we were in the 30s and 40s. Many factors are different which enable us to act. The existence of Israel, the self-confidence of American Jews, the important leadership role of America in the world, the very different posture of the Vatican toward Jews, the spread of Holocaust education are among the reasons that enable organizations such as ADL to believe that progress has been made and that there are powerful vehicles to combat this evil.”
On Iran: “We can’t afford not to take [Ahmadinejad] seriously. The combination of words and capability make Iran the greatest threat to the Jewish people since Hitler.”
Read the whole thing.
Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.