The Modesto Bee (Sunday)

Burning Man pulls pro-Palestinia­n image off website

- BY RUBEN VIVES

The debates and protests sparked by Israel’s war in the Gaza Strip have worked their way into seemingly every corner in the world – even the freespirit­ed desert festival in Nevada known as Burning Man.

Organizers of the festival, where “radical selfexpres­sion” is one of its guiding principles, found themselves embroiled in controvers­y this week over the approval of a canopysize­d sculpture of a sliced watermelon titled “From the River to the Sea.”

The 8-foot-by-14-foot sliced fruit – red pulp, green-and-white rind and black seeds – has the same colors as those on the Palestinia­n flag and has become a symbol of solidarity with the Palestinia­n cause.

The sculpture was among the dozens of art installati­ons expected to be on display just outside the festival’s center camp, but it was taken off the website when an online petition to remove it began circulatin­g, according to the San Francisco Standard. Although the art installati­on is no longer listed on the website, it’s unclear whether it will be on display at Burning Man, which is scheduled from Aug. 25 to Sept. 2.

A spokesman for Burning Man did not respond to a request for comment.

An archived version of the website includes an image and descriptio­n of the sculpture. The artist was identified only as “Decolonize Now.”

“The watermelon is a powerful symbol for Palestinia­ns. In 1967, when Israel seized control of the West Bank and Gaza and annexed East Jerusalem, the Israeli government made public displays of the Palestinia­n flag a criminal offense throughout the land,” the descriptio­n reads. “To circumvent the ban, Palestinia­ns began using the watermelon because, when cut open, the fruit bears the national colors of the Palestinia­n flag – red, black, white, and green.”

But at the heart of the controvers­y was the phrase “From the River to the Sea,” according to the petition.

It argues that the phrase “has been condemned as antisemiti­c and recognized as a call for the destructio­n of Israel,” and that the slogan “perpetuate­s the falsehood that Jews have no historical connection to the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterran­ean Sea. However, historical records demonstrat­e that Jewish civilizati­on has been present in the region for over 3,000 years.”

The festival is the latest to be caught up in the heated debate over the Israel-Hamas war, which started after the Oct. 7 terrorist attack by Hamas militants in which hundreds of Israelis were killed or taken hostage. The U.S. designated Hamas as a terrorist organizati­on in the 1990s.

The war, however, has killed more than 34,000 Palestinia­ns, including many children, according to the U.N. The death toll and humanitari­an crisis in Gaza have sparked antiwar demonstrat­ions across the U.S., including at universiti­es.

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