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Cartoons mocking Holocaust prove a flop with
Iranians
By Angus McDowall in Tehran
Published: 14 September 2006
An exhibition of cartoons about the Holocaust,
some suggesting it was fabricated or exaggerated, has been a flop in Tehran. It
drew audiences of fewer than 300 a day in its first week and now, three weeks
after sparking international furore when it opened, attracts just 50 people a
day.
Most of those approached in central Tehran said they had not heard of the
exhibition and insisted the slaughter of six million Jews by the Nazis was a
historical fact. "I'm sure the Holocaust was true - I've heard all about it from
newspapers and television," said a housewife from a religious family. "I don't
know why some say it didn't happen."
Shahram Rezaei, an Iranian cartoonist, drew Nazi soldiers laying a paper chain
in a mass grave, implying that they were faking the deaths of Jews.
Some depictions drew heavily upon anti-Semitic stereotypes. Others accep-ted the
Holocaust happened, but said it was being used to justify Western brutality in
the Middle East. An entry byAlessandro Gatto, an Italian, showed an Arab looking
forlornly from behind prison bars, which morphed into the stripes of a
concentration camp jacket. Others focused on the suffering of Palestinians.
Thousands of foreigners have visited the exhibition's website at
www.irancartoon.com, some of them engaging in angry debate. A conference on the
Holocaust is planned in Tehran for October. It is also likely to garner more
attention outside Iran than in the country.
The exhibition followed a Holocaust cartoon competition designed to show Western
double standards in freedom of speech. The angry response of Westerners to
President Ahmadinejad's Holocaust denial this spring caught many Iranians off
guard, while Danish cartoons lampooning the Prophet Mohamed provoked outrage in
the Muslim world.
A Moroccan entry by Hossein Abed showed Death riding a skeletal horse, clutching
a pencil and sporting a Nazi armband. His cloak was made of the Danish flag.
Another drawing showed an orthodox Jew pressing the face of another man into a
lake labelled "freedom of expression". The Jew held a placard saying "Mohamed
cartoon" and the drowning man held a sign saying "Holocaust". Iran's Jewish
community had a mixed reaction. "Iranian Jews didn't pay much attention," said
Haroun Yashayaie, the former head of Tehran's Jewish community. "Iranians as a
whole are not very sensitive to the issue of the Holocaust."
But a Jewish student said: "This regime is crazy. Everybody knows the Holocaust
happened. Over the past year things have become more difficult and this
exhibition shows they do not care what we think."
The cartoons included US, European, Brazilian, Korean and Chinese entries.
However, the US cartoonist David Baldinger said that his drawing "in no way
ridiculed the Holocaust".
The UN secretary general, Kofi Annan, condemned the exhibition when he visited
Iran at the beginning of the month. He said the Holocaust was "undeniable".
Iranian newspapers responded by playing on his supposed friendship with an
Israeli cartoonist.
Officials said that the exhibition championed freedom of speech, but yesterday
they closed Iran's most popular reformist newspaper. One alleged offence was its
publication of a cartoon which appeared to show President Ahmadinejad as a
donkey.
An exhibition of cartoons about the Holocaust, some suggesting it was fabricated
or exaggerated, has been a flop in Tehran. It drew audiences of fewer than 300 a
day in its first week and now, three weeks after sparking international furore
when it opened, attracts just 50 people a day.
Most of those approached in central Tehran said they had not heard of the
exhibition and insisted the slaughter of six million Jews by the Nazis was a
historical fact. "I'm sure the Holocaust was true - I've heard all about it from
newspapers and television," said a housewife from a religious family. "I don't
know why some say it didn't happen."
Shahram Rezaei, an Iranian cartoonist, drew Nazi soldiers laying a paper chain
in a mass grave, implying that they were faking the deaths of Jews.
Some depictions drew heavily upon anti-Semitic stereotypes. Others accep-ted the
Holocaust happened, but said it was being used to justify Western brutality in
the Middle East. An entry byAlessandro Gatto, an Italian, showed an Arab looking
forlornly from behind prison bars, which morphed into the stripes of a
concentration camp jacket. Others focused on the suffering of Palestinians.
Thousands of foreigners have visited the exhibition's website at
www.irancartoon.com, some of them engaging in angry debate. A conference on the
Holocaust is planned in Tehran for October. It is also likely to garner more
attention outside Iran than in the country.
The exhibition followed a Holocaust cartoon competition designed to show Western
double standards in freedom of speech. The angry response of Westerners to
President Ahmadinejad's Holocaust denial this spring caught many Iranians off
guard, while Danish cartoons lampooning the Prophet Mohamed provoked outrage in
the Muslim world.
A Moroccan entry by Hossein Abed showed Death riding a skeletal horse, clutching
a pencil and sporting a Nazi armband. His cloak was made of the Danish flag.
Another drawing showed an orthodox Jew pressing the face of another man into a
lake labelled "freedom of expression". The Jew held a placard saying "Mohamed
cartoon" and the drowning man held a sign saying "Holocaust". Iran's Jewish
community had a mixed reaction. "Iranian Jews didn't pay much attention," said
Haroun Yashayaie, the former head of Tehran's Jewish community. "Iranians as a
whole are not very sensitive to the issue of the Holocaust."
But a Jewish student said: "This regime is crazy. Everybody knows the Holocaust
happened. Over the past year things have become more difficult and this
exhibition shows they do not care what we think."
The cartoons included US, European, Brazilian, Korean and Chinese entries.
However, the US cartoonist David Baldinger said that his drawing "in no way
ridiculed the Holocaust".
The UN secretary general, Kofi Annan, condemned the exhibition when he visited
Iran at the beginning of the month. He said the Holocaust was "undeniable".
Iranian newspapers responded by playing on his supposed friendship with an
Israeli cartoonist.
Officials said that the exhibition championed freedom of speech, but yesterday
they closed Iran's most popular reformist newspaper. One alleged offence was its
publication of a cartoon which appeared to show President Ahmadinejad as a
donkey.
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©-free 2006 Adelaide Institute