The Jewish Chronicle

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- BY DANIEL SUGARMAN

A REPRESENTA­TIVE of Sheffield City Council has said she was “angry and upset” to hear of how an event partially funded by the council was “hijacked” to include a panel discussion on Israel-Palestine in which all participan­ts were anti-Israel.

Rebecca Maddox, head of Business Developmen­t in the Culture and Environmen­t office at the city council, told a member of the local Jewish community, Ellie Phillips, of her “extreme concern and displeasur­e” to hear about an “appallingl­y managed” panel event which took place after a theatrical production of My Name is Rachel Corrie, a play about the death of an American pro-Palestinia­n activist in Gaza.

The play was put on as part of a “Festival of Debate” in Sheffield ten days ago. It hosted six different events on the subject of Palestine/Israel, exclusivel­y involving anti-Israel panellists.

When Ms Phillips expressed concern at the one-sided nature of the panels, the Festival of Debate pledged to cancel the discussion after My Name is Rachel Corrie and make sure the panels were more balanced. However, the festival appeared to then renege on its promise, with a Facebook post by the play’s production team revealing the panel discussion did indeed take place, featuring the same panellists but with a “different focus”.

The festival subsequent­ly denied going back on its word, saying the decision to do so was made by the production team, “unbeknowns­t to us”.

Ms Maddox told Ms Phillips that Sheffield council had offered £500 of funding to match the production’s Arts Council applicatio­n. However, she said she had not been aware that performanc­es would also feature a panel discussion. “I am angry and upset to hear that these were so appallingl­y managed, presented via an unbalanced panel, and continued even after you had raised your concerns,” she said.

“I would like to offer an unconditio­nal apology that the performanc­es were in effect hijacked in this way.”

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