Why does John Malkovich want to kill me?
Almost anyone who criticises US or Israeli policy in the Middle East is
now in the free-fire zone
By Robert Fisk
May 15, 2002
The Iranian
Source: The Independent
It used to be just a trickle, a steady drip-drip of hate mail which arrived
once a week, castigating me for reporting on the killing of innocent Lebanese under
Israeli air raids or for suggesting that Arabs - as well as Israelis - wanted peace
in the Middle East. It began to change in the late 1990s. Typical was the letter
which arrived after I wrote my eyewitness account of the 1996 slaughter by Israeli
gunners of 108 refugees sheltering in the UN base in the Lebanese town of Qana.
"I do not like or admire anti-Semites," it began. "Hitler was one
of the most famous in recent history". Yet compared to the avalanche of vicious,
threatening letters and openly violent statements that we journalists receive today,
this was comparatively mild. For the internet seems to have turned those who do not
like to hear the truth about the Middle East into a community of haters, sending
venomous letters not only to myself but to any reporter who dares to criticise Israel
- or American policy in the Middle East.
There was always, in the past, a limit to this hatred. Letters would be signed with
the writer's address. Or if not, they would be so-ill-written as to be illegible.
Not any more. In 26 years in the Middle East, I have never read so many vile and
intimidating messages addressed to me. Many now demand my death. And last week, the
Hollywood actor John Malkovich did just that, telling the Cambridge Union that he
would like to shoot me.
How, I ask myself, did it come to this? Slowly but surely, the hate has turned to
incitement, the incitement into death threats, the walls of propriety and legality
gradually pulled down so that a reporter can be abused, his family defamed, his beating
at the hands of an angry crowd greeted with laughter and insults in the pages of
an American newspaper, his life cheapened and made vulnerable by an actor who - without
even saying why - says he wants to kill me.
Much of this disgusting nonsense comes from men and women who say they are defending
Israel, although I have to say that I have never in my life received a rude or insulting
letter from Israel itself. Israelis sometimes express their criticism of my reporting
- and sometimes their praise - but they have never stooped to the filth and obscenities
which I now receive.
"Your mother was Eichmann's daughter," was one of the most recent of these.
My mother Peggy, who died after a long battle with Parkinson's three and a half years
ago, was in fact an RAF radio repair operator on Spitfires at the height of the Battle
of Britain in 1940.
The events of 11 September turned the hate mail white
hot. That day, in an airliner high over the Atlantic that had just turned back from
its routing to America, I wrote an article for The Independent, pointing out that
there would be an attempt in the coming days to prevent anyone asking why the crimes
against humanity in New York and Washington had occurred. Dictating my report from
the aircraft's satellite phone, I wrote about the history of deceit in the Middle
East, the growing Arab anger at the deaths of thousands of Iraqi children under US-supported
sanctions, and the continued occupation of Palestinian land in the West Bank and
Gaza by America's Israeli ally. I didn't blame Israel. I suggested that Osama bin
Laden was responsible.
But the e-mails that poured into The Independent over the next few days bordered
on the inflammatory. The attacks on America were caused by "hate itself, of
precisely the obsessive and dehumanising kind that Fisk and Bin Laden have been spreading,"
said a letter from a Professor Judea Pearl of UCLA. I was, he claimed, "drooling
venom" and a professional "hate peddler". Another missive, signed
Ellen Popper, announced that I was "in cahoots with the archterrorist"
Bin Laden. Mark Guon labelled me "a total nut-case". I was "psychotic,"
according to Lillie and Barry Weiss. Brandon Heller of San Diego informed me that
"you are actually supporting evil itself".
It got worse. On an Irish radio show, a Harvard professor - infuriated by my asking
about the motives for the atrocities of 11 September - condemned me as a "liar"
and a "dangerous man" and announced that "anti-Americanism" -
whatever that is - was the same as anti-Semitism. Not only was it wicked to suggest
that someone might have had reasons, however deranged, to commit the mass slaughter.
It was even more appalling to suggest what these reasons might be. To criticise the
United States was to be a Jew-hater, a racist, a Nazi.
And so it went on. In early December, I was almost killed by a crowd of Afghan refugees
who were enraged by the recent slaughter of their relatives in American B-52 air-raids.
I wrote an account of my beating, adding that I could not blame my attackers, that
if I had suffered their grief, I would have done the same. There was no end to the
abuse that came then.
In The Wall Street Journal, Mark Steyn wrote an article under a headline saying that
a "multiculturalist" - me - had "got his due." Cards arrived
bearing the names of London "whipping" parlours. The Independent's web-site
received an e-mail suggesting that I was a paedophile. Among several vicious Christmas
cards was one bearing the legend of the 12 Days of Christmas and the following note
inside: "Robert Fiske (sic) - aka Lord Haw Haw of the Middle East and a leading
anti-semite & proto-fascist Islamophile propagandist. Here's hoping 2002 finds
you deep in Gehenna (Hell), Osama bin Laden on your right, Mullah Omar on your left.
Yours, Ishmael Zetin."
Since Ariel Sharon's offensive in the West Bank, provoked by the Palestinians' wicked
suicide bombing, a new theme has emerged. Reporters who criticise Israel are to blame
for inciting anti-Semites to burn synagogues. Thus it is not Israel's brutality and
occupation that provokes the sick and cruel people who attack Jewish institutions,
synagogues and cemeteries. We journalists are to blame.
Almost anyone who criticises US or Israeli policy in the Middle East is now in this
free-fire zone. My own colleague in Jerusalem, Phil Reeves, is one of them. So are
two of the BBCs' reporters in Israel, along with Suzanne Goldenberg of The Guardian.
And take Jennifer Loewenstein, a human rights worker in Gaza - who is herself Jewish
and who wrote a condemnation of those who claim that Palestinians are deliberately
sacrificing their children. She swiftly received the following e-mail: "BITCH.
I can smell you from afar. You are a bitch and you have Arab blood in you. Your mother
is a fucking Arab. At least, for God's sake, change your fucking name. Ben Aviram."
Does this kind of filth have an effect on others? I
fear it does. Only days after Malkovich announced that he wanted to shoot me, a website
claimed that the actor's words were "a brazen attempt at queue-jumping".
The site contained an animation of my own face being violently punched by a fist
and a caption which said: "I understand why they're beating the shit out of
me."
Thus a disgusting remark by an actor in the Cambridge Union led to a website suggesting
that others were even more eager to kill me. Malkovich was not questioned by the
police. He might, I suppose, be refused any further visas to Britain until he explains
or apologises for his vile remarks. But the damage has been done. As journalists,
our lives are now forfeit to the internet haters. If we want a quiet life, we will
just have to toe the line, stop criticising Israel or America. Or just stop writing
altogether.
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