The rapid deterioration of Haaretz

Publisher Amos Schocken has imposed a radical ideology on the daily, seemingly oblivious to the harm that the paper's political agenda, anti-Israel delegitimization, and demonic views more appropriate for the ‎Palestinian media, have inflicted.

צילום: Wikimedia Commons // The Hebrew and English editions of Haaretz [Illustrative]

Haaretz, Israel's oldest Hebrew daily newspaper, was established in 1918 by a group of left-‎leaning businessmen. In 1937, Salman Schocken bought the newspaper and it was edited by ‎his son Gershom until his death in 1990.‎

Although its circulation was never high when compared to the tabloids Maariv and Yedioth ‎Ahronoth, it has for many years been regarded as the most influential intellectual newspaper ‎in Israel with its readership including leading political and economic elites. It was considered a ‎liberal newspaper although its economic section was conservative, and it published many ‎outstanding feature articles. ‎

After Gershom died, his son Amos assumed the role of chairman, CEO and publisher. In August ‎‎2006, 25% of the Haaretz shares were sold to the German publisher M. DuMont Schauberg, ‎whose father was a Nazi party member and whose publishing enterprises promoted Nazi ‎ideology. ‎

Although he passionately denies being post-Zionist, Amos imposed his radical left-wing ‎ideology onto the newspaper which has now been transformed into a vehicle that provides ‎much of the anti-Israeli sentiment, and even anti-Semitic lies and distortions, that is a boon to ‎our adversaries.‎

It is difficult to comprehend the depths to which this once highly regarded newspaper has ‎descended. There are still a number of level-headed commentators, such as Ari Shavit and ‎Shlomo Avineri, and the occasional "fig leaf" in the form of conservative columns contributed by Moshe Arens ‎and Israel Harel. But the opinion section is overwhelmingly dominated by delusional anti-‎Zionists such as Gideon Levy and Amira Hass, who promote the idea that Israel was born in sin. ‎Levy repeatedly reiterates that Israel is one of the world's most brutal and tyrannical regimes ‎in existence today and repeatedly accuses the Jewish state of being an apartheid state. Even ‎publisher Schocken wrote a column titled "Only international pressure will end Israeli ‎apartheid."‎

These demonic views of their own country would be more appropriate for publication in the ‎Palestinian media than in an Israeli newspaper. ‎

Furthermore, even the reporting became as opinionated as op-ed articles, frequently totally ‎distorting news events and depicting Israel in the worst possible light. The reporting has also ‎become selective in its news coverage, a prime example being the suppressed coverage of ‎then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's alleged corruption, in order not to create problems for the ‎Gaza disengagement.‎

If Haaretz was restricted to an Israeli audience its impact would be minimal, as it has a small ‎circulation and few Israelis are influenced by what it publishes.‎

The real problem is the English language edition and its internet site, which is monitored by ‎diplomats and reproduced by the global media.

It serves to demonize and delegitimize Israel to ‎countless internet readers throughout the world who are under the illusion that they are ‎reading a reputable liberal Israeli newspaper. Pro-Israel Diaspora activists who would normally ‎have protested the bias and even the anti-Semitic slant of anti-Israeli media outlets, have been ‎confronted by editors who defended their approach on the grounds that it reflected the ‎editorial policies of a respected daily Israeli newspaper.‎

The damage is incalculable. There is sufficient evidence to suggest that in recent years, the ‎newspaper has caused more harm to the image of Israel than the combined efforts of our ‎adversaries. Nothing demonstrates this more than the front-page headlines in 2009 based ‎upon unsubstantiated evidence from the discredited Breaking the Silence group which first ‎promoted the lie that Israeli soldiers were committing war crimes. ‎

After successive days in which Haaretz highlighted this blood libel, the IDF chief military ‎advocate general released a report describing the accusations as "categorically false." Instead ‎of apologizing and expressing remorse, Haaretz responded sarcastically, suggesting that while ‎the report showed the IDF to be "pure as snow," implying that the accusers -- fighters and ‎commanders from some of its best combat units -- were a bunch of liars, who exaggerated their case.

Despite the unequivocal repudiation of these false allegations, the damage was done. The ‎global media enthusiastically highlighted the news from the "influential" Israeli newspaper. ‎This paved the way for subsequent allegations of Israeli war crimes, culminating in the now ‎discredited Goldstone report, which remains a central feature of the defamation leveled ‎against us by our adversaries. ‎

Another notable example was the 2014 Haaretz Conference held in New York, where in ‎deference to chief Palestinian Authority negotiator Saeb Erekat, who addressed the conference, ‎the Israeli flag was removed from the podium.‎

The situation has continued to deteriorate, with more readers canceling subscriptions, even ‎including many prominent left-wing supporters who can no longer tolerate the ever increasing ‎anti-Israel hysteria that fills the pages of the paper. ‎

Uzi Baram, a respected former minister and MK representing the Labor party, wrote a column stating that even left-wing readers do not ‎want to read a newspaper "that is ashamed of its Zionism and which believes that without ‎boycott from abroad, Israel has no chance of changing its position."‎

The harshest blow came from liberal American journalist icon Jeffrey Goldberg, who is ‎regarded as the principal media source used by U.S. President Barack Obama in relation to ‎Israel and Jewish affairs. Goldberg erupted after two American Jewish historians published an ‎article in Haaretz accusing the U.N. of establishing a Jewish racist state that is today an ‎extension of Western colonialism. They proudly announced that they would never set foot in ‎any synagogue that supported Israel.‎

Goldberg also responded to a recent Levy op-ed titled "Yes, Israel is an evil state" -- which ‎described Israel as an entity based on "pure evil. Sadistic evil. Evil for its own sake." He ‎announced that he was canceling his subscription, tweeting that "when neo-Nazis are emailing ‎me links to Haaretz op-eds declaring Israel to be evil, I'm going to take a break." He also noted ‎that "I can read anti-Semitic and anti-Israeli things like this on other websites. There really no ‎need for an Israeli website like this."‎

Sadly, Schocken's delusional response was predictable. He expressed regret that the critics ‎failed to recognize that, far from being a post-Zionist, he would not be deterred from ensuring ‎that Haaretz maintained a Zionist outlook. Having had a lengthy personal discussion with ‎Schocken on this issue, I can state with confidence that he is genuinely convinced that he is ‎on the side of the angels and does not appreciate the immense harm that Haaretz's anti-Israel ‎demonization, delegitimization and political agenda have inflicted upon us abroad. Nor does ‎he recognize the extent to which Haaretz has divorced itself from any semblance of political ‎reality in terms of the nation. ‎


Isi Leibler's website can be viewed at www.wordfromjerusalem.com. He may be contacted at ileibler@leibler.com.

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