German Jews accuse Der Spiegel of spreading anti-Semitic stereotypes
Prominent news magazine criticized for cover photo of Hasidim, weeks after coming under fire for article on ‘aggressive lobbying’ by pro-Israel group
The preeminent Jewish communal representative body in Germany has accused popular news magazine Der Spiegel of propagating anti-Semitic stereotypes after it ran a cover illustration portraying local Jews as Eastern European Hasidim.
The group, the Central Council of Jews in Germany, tweeted on Friday that the image “unfortunately uses stereotypes of Jews,” raising the question “what Der Spiegel intends with this photo selection and titling.”
The story in question dealt with the history of German Jewry and painted a portrait of contemporary Jewish life in the European country, which is largely secular.
“What is this title photo? So this is what we Jews look like in Germany?” tweeted prominent German-Jewish journalist Richard C. Schneider.
“Jews with kippas and sidelocks — the classic ‘genre photo’ in editorial offices when it comes to an article about Jews. If one were to show us ‘completely normal’ then the majority society would probably have a problem,” he said. “For anyone who thinks the photo on Spiegel History is fine: Jews in [Germany] did not look that way for the past 200 years, only [Jews] in the ’20s after the [First World War], who came from the East. So even ‘historically’ this is not representative.”


“We did not want to use an anti-Semitic cliché [and] if this impression was created, we are sorry,” the magazine said. “That was not our intention.”


The non-binding resolution compared the BDS campaign’s economic boycott of Israel and Israeli products to campaigns in Germany against Jewish-owned businesses before the Holocaust. Schuster told Germany’s Bild newspaper at the time that he thought the Spiegel article “clearly uses anti-Semitic clichés” and was “irresponsible and dangerous.”
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