Misplaced Pages

Gideon Levy: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 17:06, 2 November 2010 view sourceJaakobou (talk | contribs)15,880 edits Undid revision 394197736 by Nableezy (talk) - undo reactionism -- review the content and make a rational case on what bothers you.← Previous edit Revision as of 17:20, 2 November 2010 view source Jaakobou (talk | contribs)15,880 edits Biography: - back to "Germany" - holocaust is not in the source.Next edit →
Line 31: Line 31:


== Biography == == Biography ==
Levy was born in 1953 in ], the eldest of two sons of ] survivors. He lived through the 1967 ], when a shell fired by an Arab army exploded in a street adjacent to his home<ref>, by Gideon Levy.</ref>. Throughout his childhood and adolescence, Levy's political views were typically mainstream. "I was a full member of the nationalistic religious orgy," said Levy of his childhood. "We all were under the feeling that the whole project is in an existentialistic danger. We all felt that another holocaust is around the corner."<ref name="ABC"> ABC, 11 June 2007</ref> Levy was born in 1953 in ], the eldest of two sons to immigrants from ]. He lived through the 1967 ], when a shell fired by an Arab army exploded in a street adjacent to his home<ref>, by Gideon Levy.</ref>. Throughout his childhood and adolescence, Levy's political views were typically mainstream. "I was a full member of the nationalistic religious orgy," said Levy of his childhood. "We all were under the feeling that the whole project is in an existentialistic danger. We all felt that another holocaust is around the corner."<ref name="ABC"> ABC, 11 June 2007</ref>


Levy began his journalism career in 1974, when he served in the ] as a writer and editor for the ], until his discharge in 1978. From 1978 to 1982 he served, together with left-wing politician ], as an aide to ], then leader of the Israel Labor party. In 1982 he began working for the Israeli daily '']'' and in the years 1983–1987 he worked as the vice editor-in-chief.<ref name="7th-eye">{{cite web|url=http://www.the7eye.org.il/lexicon/Pages/Gideon_Levy.aspx|title=לקסיקון אנציקלופדי לתקשורת ועיתונות - גדעון לוי|date=26/02/2008|publisher=העין השביעית|language=Hebrew|accessdate=30 January 2010}}</ref> He has been writing the "Twilight Zone" column since 1988. Levy began his journalism career in 1974, when he served in the ] as a writer and editor for the ], until his discharge in 1978. From 1978 to 1982 he served, together with left-wing politician ], as an aide to ], then leader of the Israel Labor party. In 1982 he began working for the Israeli daily '']'' and in the years 1983–1987 he worked as the vice editor-in-chief.<ref name="7th-eye">{{cite web|url=http://www.the7eye.org.il/lexicon/Pages/Gideon_Levy.aspx|title=לקסיקון אנציקלופדי לתקשורת ועיתונות - גדעון לוי|date=26/02/2008|publisher=העין השביעית|language=Hebrew|accessdate=30 January 2010}}</ref> He has been writing the "Twilight Zone" column since 1988.

Revision as of 17:20, 2 November 2010

Gideon Levy
Born1953
Tel Aviv, Israel
NationalityIsraeli
EducationM.A. Political Science, Tel Aviv University
OccupationJournalist

Gideon Levy (Template:Lang-he; born 1953) is an Israeli journalist and editorial board member for the Haaretz newspaper. Levy is a prominent left-wing critic of Israel and Jewish Settlers, to whom he attributes "the hard reality on the Palestinian side". Levy publishes on the weekly column "Twilight Zone" of Haaretz since 1988 and is a regular participant and a representative of the left-wing in a television panel on the TV show, "Moetzet Ha'Hahamim" (Trans. 'The Committee of the Wise'). Levy has also published a book, hosted a television show, and edited or written documentaries and other programs.

Levy was awarded the Emil Grunzweig Human Rights Award in 1996 for his promotion of Palestinian rights and received an Israeli journalism award in 1997. Due to his criticism towards Israel, Levy has been called everything from a "propagandist for the Hamas" to a "heroic journalist".

Biography

Levy was born in 1953 in Tel Aviv, the eldest of two sons to immigrants from Germany. He lived through the 1967 Six-Day War, when a shell fired by an Arab army exploded in a street adjacent to his home. Throughout his childhood and adolescence, Levy's political views were typically mainstream. "I was a full member of the nationalistic religious orgy," said Levy of his childhood. "We all were under the feeling that the whole project is in an existentialistic danger. We all felt that another holocaust is around the corner."

Levy began his journalism career in 1974, when he served in the Israeli Defense Forces as a writer and editor for the Israel Army Radio, until his discharge in 1978. From 1978 to 1982 he served, together with left-wing politician Yossi Beilin, as an aide to Shimon Peres, then leader of the Israel Labor party. In 1982 he began working for the Israeli daily Haaretz and in the years 1983–1987 he worked as the vice editor-in-chief. He has been writing the "Twilight Zone" column since 1988.

In addition to his work for Haaretz, Levy published a compilation of his articles in 2004, entitled Twilight Zone – Life and Death under the Israeli Occupation. He coedited, with Haim Yavin, a documentary series, Whispering Embers (Template:Lang-he), on Russian Jewry after the fall of communism, hosted A Personal meeting with Gideon Levy, a weekly talk show that was broadcast on Israeli cable TV on channel 3, and has appeared periodically on other television talk shows.

Levy has said that his dissident views on Israel's policies toward the Palestinians developed only after he began working for Haaretz. "When I first started covering the West Bank for Haaretz, I was young and brainwashed," he said in an interview. "I would see settlers cutting down olive trees and soldiers mistreating Palestinian women at the checkpoints, and I would think, 'These are exceptions, not part of government policy.' It took me a long time to see that these were not exceptions—they were the substance of government policy."

Levy resides in Tel Aviv and is a divorced father of two.

Political views

"My modest mission is to prevent a situation in which many Israelis will be able to say, 'We didn't know'," said Levy in an interview. He often criticizes what he describes as Israeli society's "moral blindness" to the effects of its acts of war and occupation in Gaza and the West Bank. He has referred to the construction of settlements on private Palestinian land as "the most criminal enterprise in history". He opposed the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict, and the popular view that civilian casualties in that war were both inevitable and acceptable. He said in 2007 that the plight of Palestinians in the Gaza strip, which was under a strict blockade by Israel, made him ashamed to be an Israeli.

Levy supports unilateral withdrawal from occupied Palestinian territories without demanding concessions. "Israel is not being asked 'to give' anything to the Palestinians; it is only being asked to return - to return their stolen land and restore their trampled self-respect, along with their fundamental human rights and humanity."

Levy wrote that the Gaza War was a complete failure for Israel, and that none of the objectives of the war was achieved. "The conclusion is that Israel is a violent and dangerous country, devoid of all restraints and blatantly ignoring the resolutions of the United Nations Security Council, while not giving a hoot about international law," he wrote in an editorial.

Reception

Levy's writing has raised considerable controversy. He won the Anna Lindh journalism prize in 2008, for promoting cultural dialogue, for an article he wrote about Palestinian children killed by Israeli forces. The Association for Civil Rights in Israel awarded him the Emil Grunzweig Human Rights Award in 1996 for promoting human rights, and he has won numerous other awards for his writing. He has been praised by Johann Hari of The Independent as "the heroic Israeli journalist", and his columns are cited often in the New York Times and other newspapers. The French newspaper Le Monde praised him as a 'thorn in Israel's flank' and Der Spiegel characterized him as " most radical commentator".

On the other hand, his opponents have criticized him for being anti-Israeli, and for supporting Palestinian radicalism. "Is it wrong to ask of reporters in a country that is in the midst of a difficult war to show a little more empathy for their people and their country?" asks Amnon Dankner of the moderate Maariv newspaper. Ben Dror Yemini, the editor of the opinion page of Maariv, calls Levy one of the "propagandists for the Hamas". Itamar Marcus, the director of Palestinian Media Watch, writes in the website of Arutz Sheva, a publication supporting the Israeli settlers in the West Bank, " the current Israeli heroes , from whom the Palestinians garner support for their ways, Gideon Levy ..." Arutz Sheva also reported extensively on an article of Levy's that was translated into Arabic on a Hamas website, to justify two rampages by Palestinians driving bulldozers in Jerusalem in 2008. Gideon Ezra, a member of Parliament from the Kadima party, and former deputy Minister of Internal Security in Israel, even suggested in 2006 that the General Security Services should monitor Levy as a borderline security risk.

Israeli novelist Irit Linur set off a wave of subscription cancellations to Haaretz in 2002, when she wrote an open letter to the paper cancelling her own subscription. "It is a person's right to be a radical leftist, and publish a newspaper in accordance with his world view... However Haaretz has reached the point where its anti-Zionism has become stupid and evil," she wrote.". She also accused Levy of amateurism because he does not speak Arabic.

Other public figures also cancelled their subscriptions, including Roni Daniel, the military and security correspondent for Israeli Channel 2. Haaretz's publisher, Amos Schocken, expressed puzzlement at Linur's public letter, describing his newspaper as "exceedingly Zionist" and defending Levy's reports as "a description of the effects of the Israeli occupation in the territories". Levy himself joked that there is a thick file of anti-Levy cancellations in the Haaretz newsroom.

Works

  • Twilight Zone - Life and Death under the Israeli Occupation. 1988-2003. Tel Aviv: Babylon Printing, 2004
  • The Punishment of Gaza, Verso Books, 2010, ISBN 9781844676019

Anthologies

References

  1. ^ Six Day War prompts reflection in Middle East ABC, 11 June 2007
  2. ^ "לקסיקון אנציקלופדי לתקשורת ועיתונות - גדעון לוי" (in Hebrew). העין השביעית. 26/02/2008. Retrieved 30 January 2010. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
    Translation:
    The ideological nature of Levy's journalist work, and especially the column "The Twilight Zone", often raised controversy. His critics claim that he blindly prefers the Palestinian version over the Israeli one, and that his covering lacks since he does not speak Arabic and thus depends on translators who are interested parties.
    Original:
    אופיה האידיאולוגי של עבודתו העיתונאית של לוי, ובמיוחד הטור "אזור הדמדומים", עורר מחלוקות תדיר. מבקריו טוענים כי הוא מעדיף באופן עיוור את הגרסה הפלסטינית על זו הישראלית, וכי סיקורו לוקה בחסר משום שהוא אינו מדבר ערבית ולכן תלוי במתורגמנים בעלי אינטרסים.
    Translation:
    On the otherhand it was argued that his work reflects with loyalty the hard reality on the Palestinian side, and that the harsh responses he is receiving derive from the portrait that is reflected from the mirror he places in front of the Israeli public.
    Original:
    מנגד נטען כי עבודתו משקפת בנאמנות את המציאות הקשה בצד הפלסטיני, וכי התגובות הקשות שלהן הוא זוכה נובעות מן הדיוקן הנשקף מן המראה שהוא מציב מול הציבור הישראלי. Cite error: The named reference "7th-eye" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. מקבלי אות זכויות האדם ע"ש אמיל גרינצוויג ז"ל
  4. "List of recipients of the Emil Grunzweig Human Rights Award on the Association of Human Rights in Israel website" (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2010-06-20.
  5. ^ Yemini, Ben Dror (2009-01-17). "Conscience pimps - סרסורי מצפון" (in Hebrew). Ma'ariv. Retrieved 2009-04-09.
  6. ^ the heroic Israeli journalist
  7. אזור הדמדומים | 100 בהיסטוריה, by Gideon Levy.
  8. http://www.forward.com/articles/3129/
  9. Robert Hirschfield, "Israel’s Gadfly", In These Times, September 4, 2009
  10. What do you mean when you say 'no'? Haaretz, 18 November 2007
  11. Ha'aretz, Israel's Liberal Beacon The Nation, 6 September 2007
  12. Gideon Levy, ‘Demands of a thief,’ Haaretz 25/11/2007
  13. Gaza war ended in utter failure for Israel, Gideon Levy, Haaretz, 22/01/2009.
  14. Gideon Levy wins Anna Lindh Journalistic Prize for his exceptional writings on the challanges of the region
  15. מקבלי אות זכויות האדם ע"ש אמיל גרינצוויג ז"ל
  16. "List of recipients of the Emil Grunzweig Human Rights Award on the Association of Human Rights in Israel website" (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2010-06-20.
  17. see, for example, Eric Etheridge, "Morning Skim: Kinsley on Debt, Testing Obama, Israel’s Direction", February 20, 2009, or Thomas Friedman, "Wanted: An Arab Sharon", January 11, 2006
  18. Gideon Lévy : une épine dans le flanc d'Israël Le Monde, 4 September 2006 Template:Fr icon
  19. ^ Problems at Israel's Haaretz: A Newspaper Without a Country
  20. Amnon Dankner, Maariv, May 1, 2002, quoted in Gaby Weiman, "Ten Dilemmas of Journalism in Days of Terror"
  21. מרכוס, איתמר (6/5/2009). "גיבורי הפלסטינים: גדעון לוי, עמירה הס, ודני רובינשטיין" (in Hebrew). Arutz Sheva. Retrieved 2009-04-09. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  22. השראה לתעמולת חמאס: גדעון לוי
  23. אירועי תקשורת Israel Democracy Institute Template:He icon
  24. ^ Irit Linur's letter (quotation) News First Class Template:He icon
    Translation: it is a person's right to be a radical leftist, and publish a newspaper in accordance with this world view... However Haaretz reached a stage where its anti-Zionism turns too frequently to silly and mean journalism. Original:
    זכותו של אדם להיות שמאלני-רדיקלי, ולהוציא עיתון בהתאם להשקפת עולמו... אבל "הארץ" הגיע לשלב בו האנטי-ציונות שלו הופכת לעתים קרובות מדי לעיתונות מטופשת ומרושעת.Translation: When Gideon Levy accuses Israel of turning Marwan Barghouti from a peace seeker to an impresario of suicide bombings, it is as logical an interpretation, just as the claim that the wave of attacks on the September 11 were a plot by the Mossad. In a private conversation with him, he told me one time that he would not travel a hundred meters to save the life of a settler, and it seems to me that his loves and hates have been long tainting his heart-rending reports from the occupied Palestinian territories. Original:
    כשגדעון לוי מאשים את ישראל בהפיכתו של מרואן ברגותי משוחר שלום לאמרגן פיגועי התאבדות, זו פרשנות הגיונית, ממש כמו הטענה שגל הפיגועים ב-11 בספטמבר הוא מזימה של המוסד. בשיחה פרטית איתו, אמר לי פעם שהוא לא היה נוסע מאה מטר כדי להציל את חייו של מתנחל, ונראה לי שאהבותיו ושנאותיו מכתימות כבר מזמן את דיווחיו הנוגעים ללב מהשטחים הפלשתינים הכבושים. Cite error: The named reference "IritLetter" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  25. Translation:
    Furthermore, and maybe this also does not have to be noted, his whole career is touched with unseriousness, since he is one of the few journalists for Arab matters in the world who does not speak Arabic, does not understand Arabic and does not read Arabic. He gets a simultaneous translation, and that's enough. For me, that is amateur journalism.
    Original:
    כמו כן, ואולי גם את זה לא צריך לציין, כל הקריירה שלו נגועה בחלטוריזם, מכיוון שהוא אחד הכתבים היחידים בעולם לעניינים ערביים, שלא יודע ערבית, לא מבין ערבית ולא קורא ערבית. מתרגמים לו סימולטנית, וזה מספיק. לטעמי, זו עיתונות חובבנית.
  26. Levy himself confirmed in an interview in 2002 that he does not speak Arabic. See Interview with Gideon Levy (in Hebrew)
  27. שכניק, רז (2009-01-16). "עד מתי אוקטובר 65'" (in Hebrew). מוסף "7 לילות" של "ידיעות אחרונות". {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)

External links

Template:Persondata

Categories: