UPDATES

Fairfax takes its readers on a propaganda tour

Jun 23, 2015 | Ahron Shapiro

Fairfax takes its readers on a propaganda tour
news_item/fairfaxmedia_4colour.jpg

Fairfax’s arts supplements don’t set aside space for letters to the editor, so there’s little recourse for the public to respond to an article with a blatantly political slant, or factual problems.

Such was the case on Sunday – in the arts supplements for the Sydney Morning Herald, The Age and the Canberra Times, which featured a fawning interview of Irish “travel writer” Dervla Murphy in its “Books” section.

The interview, written by her longtime friend Rosamund Burton, gave Murphy a chance to see the Israeli-Palestinian through her skewed perspective through the guise of a “travel book”.

To call Murphy merely a travel writer, however, would be simply inaccurate. What she is really famous for is using travel writing as window dressing for her left-wing political agenda, which naturally varies according to her subject matter.

As the Guardian wrote about Murphy in 2006:

She says that “a letter writing segment” of her readers disapprove of the “political stuff”, but there is an equivalent group “that tells me they haven’t thought about these things in this way before and are glad that I’ve written and thought more about the political side. My view is that I have these things I want to say and I don’t really care if it spoils a pure travel book.”

Of course, Murphy is not the first writer to combine their distaste for Israel with a travel story concept. (You may remember UK writer/activist Mark Thomas’ 2011 “travel book” framed around his tracing the path of the West Bank security barrier on foot was spruiked by the Australian media at that time as well).

It takes nearly halfway through the current 1,400-word feature before Fairfax’s readers are informed that Murphy is an extreme anti-Zionist – something that is misleadingly not made clear by the book’s title or introduction, but apparently revealed in the foreword.

Murphy says in the foreword that her sympathies lie with the Palestinians. She is not anti-Semitic, but admits to ‘‘being anti-political Zionism, therefore anti-Israel as the state is at present constituted”.

The pullquote used by Fairfax in the story tells us all we need to know about Ms. Murphy and the uncritical nature of the interview and the editing.

“All the discussions about the two-state solutions have been used by the Israelis as a screen…”

Murphy, who has spent only a handful of months of her life in the Holy Land, makes no attempt to provide any compelling evidence to justify making such sweeping judgements – which amounts to demanding a UN member state in existence for 67 years be destroyed or dissolved.

She may say she is not antisemitic, but it is incumbent on her to explain why it is that of all the world’s states, it is the Jewish state, fulfilling the Jewish people’s right to self-determination, that must not be allowed to continue existing. Of course, her friend Burton doesn’t even try to challenge her on this or any other point – the article is intended as a megaphone, not a genuine interview.

Just as most people wouldn’t go to an ophthalmologist for a leg problem, you wouldn’t turn to a travel writer to get expert analysis of Israeli government policy or the ins and outs of the complex Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Murphy’s book seems to be aimed at the kind of reader who actually would, while Fairfax press, with the help of Murphy’s friend Burton, seem determined to ignore the obvious problems with doing so.

Ahron Shapiro

 

Tags:

RELATED ARTICLES


D11a774c 2a47 C987 F4ce 2d642e6d9c8d

Bibi in DC, the Houthi threat and the politicised ICJ opinion

Jul 26, 2024 | Update
Image: Shutterstock

Nine months after Oct. 7: Where Israel stands now

Jul 10, 2024 | Update
Palestinian Red Crescent workers from Al-Najjar Hospital in the city of Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip (Image: Shutterstock)

Hamas’ impossible casualty figures

Mar 28, 2024 | Update
455daec3 C2a8 8752 C215 B7bd062c6bbc

After the Israel-Hamas ceasefire for hostages deal

Nov 29, 2023 | Update
Screenshot of Hamas bodycam footage as terrorists approach an Israeli vehicle during the terror organisation's October 7, 2023 attack in southern Israel, released by the IDF and GPO (Screenshot)

Horror on Video / International Law and the Hamas War

Oct 31, 2023 | Update
Sderot, Israel. 7th Oct, 2023. Bodies of dead Israelis lie on the ground following the attacks of Hamas (Image: Ilia Yefimovich/dpa/Alamy Live News)

Israel’s Sept. 11, only worse

Oct 11, 2023 | Update

RECENT POSTS

Screenshot 2024 11 20 At 4.49.05 PM

Australia out of step with US and other allies on UN vote: Joel Burnie on Sky News

UNRWA is portrayed as the “backbone” of Gaza aid efforts, but actually supplied only 13% of aid there over recent months (Image: Anas Mohammed/ Shutterstock)

An empire of perpetual suffering

Foreign Minister Penny Wong and PM Anthony Albanese have degraded our relationship with our most important Middle Eastern partner (Screenshot)

The consequences of Australia’s Mideast policy shifts since October 7

An extension of the Abraham Accords that saw a string of Middle Eastern countries making peace with Israel is likely to be a priority (Image: Whitehouse.gov/ Flickr)

Trump and the Middle East

French UNIFIL soldiers in southern Lebanon (Image: Shutterstock)

Lebanon: Optimism and obstacles

Screenshot 2024 11 20 At 4.49.05 PM

Australia out of step with US and other allies on UN vote: Joel Burnie on Sky News

UNRWA is portrayed as the “backbone” of Gaza aid efforts, but actually supplied only 13% of aid there over recent months (Image: Anas Mohammed/ Shutterstock)

An empire of perpetual suffering

Foreign Minister Penny Wong and PM Anthony Albanese have degraded our relationship with our most important Middle Eastern partner (Screenshot)

The consequences of Australia’s Mideast policy shifts since October 7

An extension of the Abraham Accords that saw a string of Middle Eastern countries making peace with Israel is likely to be a priority (Image: Whitehouse.gov/ Flickr)

Trump and the Middle East

French UNIFIL soldiers in southern Lebanon (Image: Shutterstock)

Lebanon: Optimism and obstacles

SORT BY TOPICS