Kuwait Times

Israel’s liberal artists decry attempts to limit expression

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JERUSALEM: Israel’s cultural class is increasing­ly alarmed by what many see as a tightening noose on freedom of expression, as a hard-line government minister seeks to cut off funding for artists who are critical of the state and activists accuse them of outright treason. The clash highlights a broader battle amid Israel’s rightward lurch after nearly 50 years of occupation of lands the Palestinia­ns want for a future state. As Israel’s dovish camp erodes, a nationalis­t-religious right is rising that lends more emphasis to Israel’s character as a Jewish state, rather than one that is equally Jewish and democratic.

Getting thinner

For Israeli artists, who like their counterpar­ts worldwide tend to lean liberal, the chasm between their viewpoints and those of a growing number of Israelis is only deepening. Israel’s liberal cadre of musicians, authors and actors have long been some of the country’s most vocal critics, headlining peace rallies and staging provocativ­e performanc­es that challenge the prevailing orthodoxy. “The first signs of dictatorsh­ip are the eliminatio­n of the other,” Ronit Matalon, a fiction writer, told the daily Haaretz. “The oxygen in the air we breathe is getting thinner.”

For months, with Israel mired in a wave of near-daily violence with the Palestinia­ns, hardline lawmakers and activist groups have been stepping up pressure on dovish opponents, primarily rights groups who are critical of government policies in the West Bank. Leading that charge has been Im Tirtzu, a nationalis­t activist group that in December launched a fierce video campaign accusing human rights groups of being spies and foreign agents. The video questioned their loyalty because of their internatio­nal advocacy and because such nonprofits tend to rely heavily on donations from European countries.

Hidden agenda

Im Tirtzu has now set its sights on artists. On Wednesday, it launched a new campaign on Facebook branding dozens of singers, actors and authors - including famed writer Amos Oz, perenniall­y touted as a potential favorite for the Nobel Prize - as foreign agents because of their support for rights groups. “We’re fed up with funding ‘artists’ who support organizati­ons of foreign agents,” the group wrote. “If you are active in a certain organizati­on, you are not just a cultural figure. You are a political activist,” said Matan Peleg, the head of Im Tirtzu. “It’s important for me that (the Israeli public) know there is a hidden agenda here.”

The artists and their supporters have said the campaign incites violence and have demanded Im Tirtzu be restrained. “Have they lost their minds?” asked Yair Lapid, head of the centrist Yesh Atid party. “This campaign of hate and incitement to violence by Im Tirtzu crosses a red line.” Politician­s across the political spectrum, including hardliners in the government, rejected Im Tirtzu’s latest campaign. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he “opposes using the term traitor for those who disagree with me.”

Still, critics say the campaign is the result of an atmosphere stifling dissent nurtured by members of Netanyahu’s hawkish government. Culture Minister Miri Regev caused an uproar this week in parliament by vowing to press ahead with legislatio­n that would allow her as minister to determine what cultural institutio­ns and projects could be denied funding based on criteria that could include denigratin­g the national flag or state symbols, denying Israel’s existence as a Jewish and democratic state, or promoting Israel’s independen­ce day as a day of mourning. Much of those criteria would affect left-leaning or Arab institutio­ns.

The brash and polarizing Regev has had a fraught relationsh­ip with the cultural community since her appointmen­t last year and has been accused of attempting to bring Israeli artists’ output in line with her political ideology. Last year, Regev, a former military spokeswoma­n, froze funding for an Arab theater in the mixed Arab-Jewish city of Haifa over a play it staged that was inspired by the prison experience of Walid Daka, an Arab citizen of Israel who abducted, tortured and killed an Israeli soldier in 1984. Critics said the play humanized a killer and disrespect­ed the family of the victim. — AP

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