Thursday, Nov 15, 2012 05:20 PM +0000
Pam Geller compares Jewish group to Nazi sympathizers
A Jewish group opposes the Islamophobic activist-blogger's new bus ads and gets labeled "judenrat" in return
Topics: Chicago, Islamophobia, Pam Geller, Sharia, Politics News
For some people, stoking fears about Islam and Shariah is an election year issue (ahem, Rep. Michele Bachmann),
but for others, like influential Islamophic blogger Pam Geller, it’s a
life’s mission. Geller led the campaign against the so-called Ground
Zero Mosque in lower Manhattan and is one of a handful of activists at
the core of the anti-Shariah movement; a few months ago, she paid for controversial ads
on New York City buses and subways defaming Islam as “savage.” The
campaign provoked a backlash, including vandalism and lawsuits, but the
law sided with Geller’s right to free speech in both cases, with a court ordering New York’s transit authority to display the ads and arrests for some who defaced her ads.
Now she’s taking her act to Chicago, where her ad went up on 10 buses yesterday afternoon. “In any war between the civilized man and the savage, support the civilized man. Support Copts. Defeat Jihad,” the ads read. Copts are Egyptian Christians who have been persecuted by the Muslim majority in the country.
But this time, activists, led by the Chicago-based Jewish Council on Urban Affairs, were prepared. They launched a campaign against the ads before they even appeared. “These ads are meant to create false divisions among our communities, generating suspicion and animosity,” Judy Levey, the executive director of the group, said in a statment. “It is very important to say in a clear voice, ‘not in our city.’ We’re better than that.” The JCUA held a rally Tuesday night against the ads and set up an online campaign to coordinate action and to collect voices of Jews in the area upset with the ads.
While Geller’s actions have been met with resistance from multi-faith groups in the past, opposition has usually been led by Muslim groups like CAIR, the Council on American Islamic Relations. How did she react to the novelty of a Jewish-spearheaded opposition? By comparing them to Nazi sympathizers, naturally.
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Now she’s taking her act to Chicago, where her ad went up on 10 buses yesterday afternoon. “In any war between the civilized man and the savage, support the civilized man. Support Copts. Defeat Jihad,” the ads read. Copts are Egyptian Christians who have been persecuted by the Muslim majority in the country.
But this time, activists, led by the Chicago-based Jewish Council on Urban Affairs, were prepared. They launched a campaign against the ads before they even appeared. “These ads are meant to create false divisions among our communities, generating suspicion and animosity,” Judy Levey, the executive director of the group, said in a statment. “It is very important to say in a clear voice, ‘not in our city.’ We’re better than that.” The JCUA held a rally Tuesday night against the ads and set up an online campaign to coordinate action and to collect voices of Jews in the area upset with the ads.
While Geller’s actions have been met with resistance from multi-faith groups in the past, opposition has usually been led by Muslim groups like CAIR, the Council on American Islamic Relations. How did she react to the novelty of a Jewish-spearheaded opposition? By comparing them to Nazi sympathizers, naturally.
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Alex Seitz-Wald is Salon's political reporter. Email him at aseitz-wald@salon.com, and follow him on Twitter @aseitzwald.
More Alex Seitz-Wald.
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