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The group blog of The American Prospect

OBAMA DIDN'T RELEASE THE NOTE HE PUT IN THE WESTERN WALL.

“Is Anything Sacred?” was the title of a post a couple of days ago on The New Republic’s blog, The Plank. The subject: Publication of the note that Barack Obama placed in the Western Wall when he visited last week. The daily Ma’ariv ran that “scoop,” and immediately found itself under intense criticism -- from rabbis, talk-show hosts, and a lawyer who began organizing a consumer boycott of the paper -- for violating Obama’s privacy and Jewish religious sensibilities.

But the Plank’s Zvika Krieger wasn’t aiming his question at Ma’ariv. He was asking if Obama considered anything sacred. For in responding to the firestorm, a Ma’ariv spokesman had told various Israeli papers (English here, Hebrew here): “Barack Obama’s note was approved for publication in the international media even before he put [it] in the Kotel…” Krieger accepted that statement. A fairly early version of his post (via Google’s cache) said:

Obama may be above politicizing our troops, but if his campaign did approve the note for publication before he placed it, then I guess he isn’t above politicizing religion.

Clever: A snarky reference to Obama’s canceled visit to wounded U.S. soldiers, casting doubts on his reasons for canceling, as prelude to a statement that the candidate was willing to trash Jewish sensitivities for politics’ sakes. Truly, Obama had hit the trifecta: apostate Muslim with radical Christian preacher desecrates Jewish holy sites. But by writing the story this way, Krieger actually doubled down on Ma’ariv’s failed journalistic judgment. At least he has been doing a somewhat better job of backtracking.

Start here: Ma’ariv’s story from last Friday on the note is still available on line (in Hebrew). It explains how the paper got the note:

As soon as [Obama] left the wall, a yeshivah student hurried to the stones where the note had been inserted and searched between them until he found the hoped-for note… which has reached Ma’ariv’s hands.

The picture of the note showed it folded and crumpled. Yediot Aharonot, Israel’s largest-circulation paper, was reportedly offered the note and turned it down. Apparently, the yeshivah student was shopping his find around. Yediot is also a tabloid with screaming headlines, not known for its tact, but even its editors knew where to draw the line.

So virtually every paper in Israel was soon publishing that statement from Ma’ariv about how Obama had really handed out the note itself. The statement’s last sentence (take anti-nausea pill before reading) said:

In any case, since Obama is not a Jew, publishing the note does not constitute an infringement on his right to privacy.

Now let’s say I’m a journalist, and I read Ma’ariv’s second version. How should I relate to it?

Well, if Obama really had offered the note to everyone, everyone would have published it, and no one would have been upset. That’s exactly what happened when Pope John Paul II visited the Wall in March, 2000, during his historic journey of reconciliation, and publicized the prayer he inserted between the stones. He made a point of writing it in English. You can find it on the website of the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land, a Church body. No one thought the pope had violated religious custom. The pope’s prayer was meant to be public, so there was nothing untoward in publishing it. It was like printing words of a sermon. Publishing Obama’s words was the equivalent of using a secret mike to capture a whispered prayer.

Ma’ariv didn’t get that. That’s not terribly surprising. In the early 90s, I called Israeli author David Grossman to ask him to write for an op-ed for the Jerusalem Report, where I then worked. He said he couldn’t write on what I wanted, because he’d just done that piece for Ma’ariv. I apologized for missing it. He kindly told me not to worry about it, adding, “You know what they say: When I don’t have a book, I read a newspaper. When I don’t have a newspaper, I read Ma’ariv.”

(Full disclosure: I wrote for Ma’ariv’s op-ed page for a couple of years. I had to pay the bills, I like writing in Hebrew, and there aren’t many papers here. Some good journalists work there now. And I’ve quoted Ma’ariv stories that I have reason to regard as solid. A newspaper isn’t monolithic.)

Given the choice of believing Obama, who’s campaign denied releasing the note, or Ma’ariv, which was retreating under fire, Krieger chose Ma’ariv. Much as I believe that the press should have an adversary relationship with politicians, I don’t think that means that a newspaper, any newspaper, should always be trusted over a pol.

Eventually, Krieger got a Ma’ariv spokesman on the phone himself and asked about the accusation that Obama had set up the whole story himself. The guy on the other end of the line said

…that the accusation is “completely false,” and that he has no idea who these papers were quoting from Ma’ariv. “No official spokesman for Ma’ariv told this to any of the papers.”

Stage II of the walk-back: Spokesman No. 2 denies all knowledge of Spokesman No. 1. And Krieger’s new item on the Plank is entitled, “Obama Vindicated.”

You know, maybe he isn’t a closet Muslim, either.

--Gershom Gorenberg

Also on South Jerusalem.



COMMENTS

OK--Maybe Spokesman No. 2 is right, and Ma'ariv had no such Spokesman No. 1. If so, hat raises an interesting question: Who was Spokesman No. 1? Note that it's not the first time this season that an item that was both derogatory of Obama and false has appeared in the Jerusalem Post; remember the item about the interview with Obama's Kenyan half-brother Malik? Somebody may be playing games with the Israeli media, using it to inject viral rumors into the American electoral bloodstream.

McCain skipped the troops

The problem here is that the McCain campaign was denied a visit to a military base under the same policy back in April. Of course, there was no outcry or false outrage from Brian Rogers at that time.

From CNN:


With Department of Defense rules prohibiting political campaigning on military bases, it was determined that in some cases McCain could visit the installations as a senator but could not engage in any political activity or have news media present.
McCain campaign officials said Thursday they intentionally did not campaign on military property.

"We follow the rules," said senior McCain adviser Steve Schmidt.

Because all three presidential candidates are sitting senators, DoD officials have privately noted for some weeks that the whole matter of drawing the line between Senate business and campaigning is sensitive.

A U.S. Army official told CNN there are no pending requests from any of the campaigns to visit Army bases at this time. He noted that Sen. Barack Obama recently visited Fayetteville, North Carolina, but did not go to Fort Bragg; and Sen. Hillary Clinton visited Killeen, Texas, but did not go to Fort Hood.

For his Wednesday visit to the U.S. Naval Academy -- of which he is a graduate -- McCain was allowed to make a political appearance at the academy's football stadium because it is privately owned property and is not owned or run by the U.S. military.

Earlier in the day, when McCain had breakfast with midshipmen on academy grounds, it was closed to the press and considered a private event.

The military spokesman points out that any U.S. senator could also request to visit the academy or any military installation.

But the Navy declined a McCain campaign request to speak at the Naval Aviation Museum at the naval base in Pensacola, Florida, because it is a military owned installation and is located on the base, the official said.

McCain did attend an airshow over the weekend at the Navy base in Meridian, Mississippi, because it was open to the general public. But he declined to answer political questions from reporters traveling with him.

I know nothing about Ma'Ariv, then or now, so I have no idea whether it was or is justified; but that putdown was hilarious, and I'll have to find an occasion to use it.

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