Thursday, May 28, 2009

Farouk Hosni backtracks on anti-Israel 'hyperbole'

In the latest instalment of this ongoing saga, front-runner as the next director-general of UNESCO Egyptian ex-minister Farouk Hosni, yesterday announced that he 'regrets' his remarks denigrating Israeli culture, according to Reuters:

PARIS (Reuters) - Egyptian Culture Minister Farouk Hosni, a candidate for the top job at the United Nations culture agency UNESCO, apologised on Wednesday for calling for Israeli books to be burnt.

Hosni's bid for the post of UNESCO director-general provoked the anger of a group of intellectuals who accused him of anti-Semitism in a French newspaper column last week.

Writing in the same newspaper, Le Monde, Hosni said he regretted his words, adding that they had allowed detractors to associate him with things that he found hateful.

"Nothing is more distant to me than racism, the negation of others or the desire to hurt Jewish culture or any other culture," he wrote.

Philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy, film director Claude Lanzmann and Nobel Peace Price laureate Elie Wiesel last week quoted Hosni as saying he would burn Israeli books and calling Israeli culture "inhuman".

"Let's burn these books; if there are any, I will burn them myself before you," they quoted Hosni as telling a member of parliament who had confronted him about the presence of Israeli books in Egyptian libraries last May.

Hosni told media at the time he had meant the comments as "hyperbole".

UNESCO will elect a new director-general in October and Hosni, who has been nominated by the Egyptian government, was viewed as a front-runner to become the Arab world's first head of the Paris-based organisation.

However, Levy, Lanzmann and Wiesel urged other countries to block his candidature, saying Hosni had a record of denigrating Israeli culture.

"Israeli culture is an inhuman culture; it's an aggressive, racist, pretentious culture that is based on a simple principle, stealing that which does not belong to it and then claiming it as its own," they quoted him as saying in 2001."

Read article in full

Haaretz: Netanyahu withdraws objection to Hosni (with thanks: Roger)

Times article

2 comments:

  1. Let's see if I understand this right. If you're the Pope and you quote somebody as saying that Islam is "inhuman," it becomes an occasion for widespread riots around the world in which people get killed, because saying that Islam is "inhuman" is offending their tender, delicate sensitivities. On the other hand, if you're an Arab Muslim and refer to Israeli culture as "inhuman," it's okay.

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  2. bear in mind that many Israeli "leftists" say the same. Also recall that much or most of the Israeli "Left" or "extreme left," is funded by the EU.

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