Dutch public TV pulls ‘anti-Semitic’ game from site (JERUSALEM POST) By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL AND JPOST CORRESPONDENT 03/16/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/JewishWorld/JewishNews/Article.aspx?id=262093
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BERLIN – Dutch public broadcasting network VPRO removed a game
decried by human rights groups as anti-Semitic from its website on
Wednesday.
The decision follows the publication of an exposé in The Jerusalem
Post on Tuesday about the game, which features Israeli settlers who
use an “Anne Frank card” and “Jewish stinginess” to colonize the West
Bank.
According to a VPRO statement, “In November 2010, the VPRO platform
for younger viewers, Dorst, published on the website and in the TV
guide a satirical item, The Settlers of the West Bank, a commentary
over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict shaped in the form of a well-
known board game, The Settlers of Catan... The Settlers of the West
Bank is now, almost one year and half years later, the subject of
discussion on whether it contains elements of an anti- Semitic
nature... The VPRO finds the political question relevant and will
obligingly discuss the borders of satire.
But it has no desire or need to discuss alleged anti-Semitism through
this item.
Therefore, the VPRO took off the game The Settlers of the West Bank
from the Dorst site.”
Ronny Naftaniel, the head of The Hague-based Center for Information
and Documentation on Israel, told the Post, “This game had to be
removed immediately when the first complaints about it were made. The
game is based on biases and is unacceptable for Dutch Jews and all
Dutchmen. It’s just a shame that VPRO is removing it after The
Jerusalem Post wrote about it. VPRO should have done it by
themselves.”
In an email to the Post, Benjamin Teuber, the director of marketing
and business development for the Catan board game company,
wrote, “The Catan company, which is the licensed operator of The
Settlers of Catan, was not informed about this project and if we
were, we would not have issued approval. We expressly distance
ourselves from its content.”
He added that the game crossed over the border of respectable satire,
and that “it is regrettable that the Catan brand, which stands for
cooperation and peacefulness, was misused for such purposes.”
Yochanan Visser, the head of Missing Peace and a Dutch-Israeli, wrote
to the Post, saying that “sadly the anti-Semitic VPRO publication is
not an isolated matter. Recently, we have also seen an anti-Semitic
article about Israeli prenatal care in the Dutch daily Trouw.
“This week, two major Dutch papers deliberately distorted the facts
about the escalation in southern Israel. Both the NRC [an
abbreviation for the New Rotterdam Paper] and the Volkskrant reported
that Israel fired 200 rockets into Gaza.
Therefore I think it’s high time for a public debate about the way
the Dutch media contributes to the demonization of Israel and rising
anti-Semitism in general,” Visser wrote.
Rabbi Abraham Cooper, from the Simon Wiesenthal Center, told the Post
by email, “The historic embedded anti- Semitic stereotypes combined
with anti- Israel animus are a toxic mix in much of Europe. That it
took an exposé by The Jerusalem Post and a protest by the Simon
Wiesenthal Center to force the removal of this blatantly anti-
Semitic ‘game’ is a reflection of a broader reality in 2012 Europe:
Classic anti-Semitic stereotypes, shunned in polite society after the
Shoah, are back in mainstream vogue. They create an especially toxic
combination when combined with an anti-Israel animus.” (© 1995-2011,
The Jerusalem Post 03/16/12)
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