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Does The NYT Magazine Have A Jewish Problem?

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  • Does The NYT Magazine Have A Jewish Problem?

    DOES THE NYT MAGAZINE HAVE A JEWISH PROBLEM?
    Ami Eden

    Jewish Telegraphic Agency, NY
    http://blogs.jta.org/telegraph/2007/10/25/does- the-nyt-magazine-have-a-jewish-problem/
    Oct 26 2007

    The public editor of The New York Times, Clark Hoyt, recently gave
    a real spanking to the Sunday magazine and Deborah Solomon over her
    approach to the weekly "Questions For" feature. Next time he has the
    magazine on the brain, maybe he could get to a question that's been
    bugging me for months: Does the NYT Magazine have a Jewish problem?

    I wouldn't normally put it that way, but the first troublesome item
    to catch my attention was the January 14 profile by James Traub titled
    "Does Abe Foxman Have an Anti-Anti-Semite Problem?"

    Next was Ian Buruma's February 4 "Tariq Ramadan Has an Identity
    Issue." And, finally, "Orthodox Paradox," Noah Feldman's much-discussed
    July 22 lament about being cut like a foreskin from his high school
    alumni newsletter on account of his marriage to a non-Jew.

    All three articles contained a Jews-should-get-over-it-already bias:
    Traub's piece was a critique of Abe Foxman's crying "gevalt" over
    anti-Semitism, with the underlying message that the Jewish community
    in general needs to stop stifling debate on Israel. Buruma basically
    told American Jewish organizations to stop picking on Tariq Ramadan,
    a controversial Muslim scholar whose chance to teach at Notre Dame
    fell through because the State Department would not give him a visa.

    Feldman portrayed any effort by Orthodox institutions to uphold
    a communal taboo against intermarriage as a primitive obstacle to
    "reconciling the vastly disparate values of tradition and modernity."

    Of course, harping on bias in the NYT Magazine is like complaining
    about chocolate chips in a Toll House cookie. If you expect straight
    cookie, then stick to the newspaper - the magazine is a place for
    writers to open up, both in terms of space and voice.

    Still, creative freedom doesn't mean creative license. Each of these
    stories either danced up to or crossed the line on pertinent facts -
    in a way that served to bolster the writer's agenda. In at least one
    case, the journalistic misdeed was serious enough for the public editor
    to urge one Jewish organization to write a letter to the editor -
    which the magazine then failed to print.

    Let's start with Traub's Foxman problem.

    Traub did a masterful job in terms of capturing Foxman's personality,
    of getting a sense of what it feels like to be in a room with the
    ADL when he gets rolling, and Traub's not wrong to suggest that
    Foxman has become a polarizing figure. But the piece was plagued by
    several major mistakes or omissions. Perhaps the biggest doozy was
    this assertion: "Foxman upset many of his colleagues by extending
    a welcome to Christian conservatives, whose leaders tended to be
    strongly pro-Israel even as they spoke in disturbing of America's
    'Christian' identity. Foxman was willing to cut them some slack on
    issues of social justice, and even of church-state relations, in the
    name of solidarity toward Israel."

    Prior to the recent controversy over Foxman's initial refusal to
    classify the massacres of Armenians as genocide, his loudest critics in
    recent years have been those who complain that the ADL leader spends
    too much time bashing religious conservatives. Jewish and Christian
    right-wingers slammed him for his criticisms of Mel Gibson and "The
    Passion," and were livid in 2005 when he gave a major speech warning
    of a campaign to "Christianize America." Given the slant of Traub's
    story, it was also unfair not to mention that Foxman was attacked by
    Jewish hawks for giving a prominent platform to NYT columnist Thomas
    Friedman, a frequent critic of Israel's Likud governments. Readers
    probably also deserved to know that Foxman, during both the Oslo
    process and the lead up to the Gaza disengagement, spent serious
    political capital in pressing American Jewish groups to line up behind
    Jerusalem's peace moves.

    In Feldman's story, the main topic of dispute has been the opening
    anecdote:

    A number of years ago, I went to my 10th high-school reunion, in the
    backyard of the one classmate whose parents had a pool. Lots of my
    classmates were there. Almost all were married, and many already
    had kids. This was not as unusual as it might seem, since I went
    to a yeshiva day school, and nearly everyone remained Orthodox. I
    brought my girlfriend. At the end, we all crowded into a big group
    photo, shot by the school photographer, who had taken our pictures
    from first grade through graduation. When the alumni newsletter came
    around a few months later, I happened to notice the photo. I looked,
    then looked again. My girlfriend and I were nowhere to be found.

    Combined with the graphic (see below), the clear implication was that
    the couple had somehow been removed from the photo.

    But, as the New York Jewish Week reported, it turned out that Feldman
    and the magazine editors learned shortly before deadline that this
    is not what had happened. The real story was that the school had
    selected one of several photos - each containing only about half of
    the people at the reunion.

    The magazine has insisted that it did nothing wrong. Here's what Alex
    Star, senior editor at the magazine, had to say about it in an e-mail
    to the Orthodox Union:

    In his essay, Mr. Feldman does not assert, as the Jewish Week claims,
    that he was "erased" from the photograph or that he and his wife were
    "stricken from the photo." Nowhere does he say, as you put it in your
    letter to us, that he was "deliberately cropped out" of the picture.

    The assertions that you and the Jewish Week attribute to the essay
    are assertions that are not made in the essay.

    In researching the article, we obtained the original contact sheets
    for the pictures taken by Lenny Eisenberg. The record shows that
    Eisenberg took five wide-angle photos of the entire crowd at the class
    reunion. In addition, he took a photo of the crowd from the left side,
    which includes Mr. Feldman and his wife; and a photo of the crowd from
    the right side, which does not include Mr. Feldman and his wife. The
    Maimonides School newsletter chose to publish the photo of the crowd
    from the right side - the photo that does not include Mr. Feldman
    and his wife. These facts are entirely consistent with the essay we
    published, where the author writes that a "group photo" was taken and
    yet when the alumni newsletter appeared, he and his girlfriend were
    "nowhere to be found."

    Go back, look at the graphic (which Star does not mention), and then
    read the opening paragraph again. Then decide if the magazine is
    being straight with readers, both in the original article and the
    subsequent letter.

    At least an editor at the magazine addressed the issue.

    Jack Rosen and the American Jewish Congress are still waiting for
    a response to their complaints about this passage in Buruma's piece
    on Ramadan:

    Ramadan himself says that it was because of his views on Israel and
    U.S. policy in Iraq that he was deprived of his visa to teach in the
    U.S. He told me: "I was asked to take part in a dialogue in Paris
    with representatives of American Jewish organizations, including Jack
    Rosen, head of the American Jewish Congress. It turned out to be less
    of a dialogue than an interview about my opinions on the Palestinian
    conflict. Rosen promised to talk to President Bush. But after this
    interview, I knew I would never get a visa."

    That's a serious charge, reminiscent of classical anti-Semitic canards
    about Jews pulling the strings of power behind the scenes.

    Buruma immediately acknowledges as much, writing that the remarks
    "might sound like just the kind of conspiracy theory anti-Semites
    tend to indulge in." He then proceeds to assure that reader that
    Ramadan is not an anti-Semite, without addressing the substance of
    the initial claim about Jews conspiring to block his visa.

    Rosen and other officials at the AJCongress say that Buruma never
    called them for comment. Just days after publication, Rosen wrote a
    letter to the then-public editor Byron Calame, in which he said that
    the visa was never discussed during the meeting and denied that he or
    any other AJCongress official ever discussed the matter with the State
    Department. According to Rosen, the AJCongress sought out Ramadan as
    part of their effort to open a dialogue with moderate Muslims.

    In a February 26, 2007 e-mail in response, Calame wrote :

    It is my view that Mr. Buruma should have given Jack Rosen an
    opportunity, before publication, to respond to Tariq Ramadan's
    description of the Paris gathering. Failing to do so, it seems to me,
    does not represent The New York Times at its best. I have no authority
    as public editor, however, to require the magazine or the newspaper
    to acknowledge and deal with such situations.

    I would suggest that you consider sending a letter to the editor
    to the magazine for possible publication. It would give you an
    opportunity to present the American Jewish Congress perspective on
    the meeting. I can't make any commitment on behalf of the magazine,
    but I would urge you to try this route.

    AJCongress officials say they followed the public editor's advice,
    and sent a nearly identical letter to the magazine, but never heard
    back. It was never published. (Click here for the full correspondence.)

    Mistakes happen, and - despite what left-wing and right-wing bloggers
    might tell you - mistakes are often not the result of bias. But this
    pattern of mistakes - and the response or lack of response on the
    part of the editors - is enough to raise some legitimate questions.

    Or maybe I just need to get over worrying about keeping things kosher.
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