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Anti-Semitic 'Elders of Zion' Gets New Life on Egypt TV

October 26, 2002
By DANIEL J. WAKIN






CAIRO, Oct. 25 - The images flash quickly across the
television screen. They show a bloody face, Victorian men
and women in a drawing room, soldiers wielding rifle butts.
And a man in black hat with side curls and long beard.

An Egyptian satellite television channel has begun teasers
for its blockbuster Ramadan series that its producers
acknowledge incorporates ideas from the infamous czarist
forgery "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion." That
document, a pillar of anti-Semitic hatred for about a
century, appears to be gaining a new foothold in parts of
the Arab world, some scholars and observers say.

The series, "Horse Without a Horseman," traces the history
of the Middle East from 1855 to 1917 through the eyes of an
Egyptian who fought British occupiers and the Zionist
movement.

It is divided into 41 episodes and will be shown nightly
through the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, which begins in
about two weeks and guarantees maximum viewership because
many Muslims congregate at home after breaking the daily
fast.

With Egyptian state television and other Arab channels also
broadcasting the series, the potential audience numbers in
the tens of millions.

A historical epic with a pulpy look, judging from the
commercials, the series is the first production of
one-year-old Dream TV.

The channel is one of the country's first two private
stations, and has a somewhat freewheeling format compared
with state television. It is controlled by Ahmed Bahgat, a
prominent Egyptian businessman.

The "Protocols," which purports to depict Jewish leaders
plotting world dominion, has long been recognized as a
fabrication by the czarist secret police. It was used in
early 20th-century Russia and in Nazi Germany as a pretext
for persecution of Jews. Still, the show's backers say they
are keeping an open mind about its authenticity. They say
that in any event, reality seems to bear them out, in that
Israel controls part of the Middle East.

"In a way, don't they dominate?" said Hala Sarhan, Dream
TV's vice president and feisty personality on the air. "Of
course, what we read from the `Protocols,' it says it's a
kind of conspiracy. They want to control; they want to
dominate. I represent everybody in the street. We will see
whether this happened throughout history or not."

Ms. Sarhan is quick to point out that the material about
the "Protocols" is only one aspect of a sweeping television
panorama. But others who have seen the entire program say
that a Zionist conspiracy to control Arab lands is one of
the themes running through the series.

At one point, men in the Arab anti-British resistance
movement find the "Protocols" and have it translated, said
a co-writer, Muhammad Baghdadi. "They discovered that many
things in this document were happening in reality," Mr.
Baghdadi said, "whether they were written by the Jews or
not."

The underlying focus of the drama "is how the Zionist
entity was planted in Palestine and in the Arab world," he
said. Mr. Baghdadi said the series respected Judaism as a
religion. "We only criticize the Zionist movement," he
said.

Nevertheless, the program has troubled the United States as
well as Israel. American Embassy officials say they raised
their concerns with the Egyptian government but received a
noncommittal response.

The series is closely associated with Muhammad Sobhi, a
popular Egyptian screen and stage actor who is not shy
about courting controversy and whose previous works have
sometimes poked fun at Arabs. He co-wrote the script and
plays the main character.

Mr. Sobhi declined to be interviewed, but earlier this year
he told Al Jazeera television that whether or not the
"Protocols" was authentic, "Zionism exists and it has
controlled the world since the dawn of history."

He said that many of the book's predictions had been borne
out and that it would be "stupid" not to consider the
possibility that the book was true, even if the chance was
"one in a million."

Commentators, like David I. Kertzer, a professor of
anthropology at Brown University, have noted an increase in
anti-Semitic imagery more typical of Western societies
cropping up in the Arab world since the Sept. 11 attacks,
along with the canard that Jews were warned of the attacks.


Michael A. Sells, a professor of comparative religion at
Haverford College, said, "With each new wave of war and
anger, the European-imported brand digs itself deeper into
society."

Indeed, the "Protocols" lately appears to be gaining more
attention in the Arab media and more space on bookshelves.
Yet the extent of its impact in Egypt is questionable.
Egyptian observers say that most people in this country of
limited literacyhave not heard of the book, although those
who have probably accept it as real.

"Once it goes on television it enters everyone's living
room, and that's where the danger is," said Samir Raafat, a
writer and chronicler of Cairene life who is critical of
the series. "You are spoon-feeding them more hate
propaganda. This is not conducive to tolerance of the other
or knowing the other. There's a price going to be paid."

The "Protocols" spread through Europe in the 1920's, and
has had a presence in the Middle East for decades, said
Abraham H. Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation
League of B'nai B'rith.

He said he had asked European governments and the United
States to press Egypt to ban the broadcast.

Mr. Foxman and experts say anti-Semitic writings and images
are on the rise in the Arab world. Some here say anger at
Israeli actions against the Palestinians is being expressed
in anti-Jewish terms, with the line sometimes blurred.
Perhaps that is not surprising when the words Jews,
Zionists and Israelis are often interchangeable in the Arab
media and official discourse.

Scholars of the Islamic world, which historically has had a
closeness with Judaism, say demonization on both sides is
inevitable after such long conflict in the Middle East.

An Egyptian government spokesman, Nabil Osman, rejected
criticism of "Horseman Without a Horse." "It's the same old
gimmick, to raise the issue of anti-Semitism when it's
convenient," he said. "To prejudge something you didn't see
underlines some ulterior goals, which I'm not in a position
to decipher."

Mr. Osman disputed that there was an increasingly
anti-Jewish strain in Egyptian society. "There is a world
of difference," he said, between anger at Israeli policies
and anti-Semitism.

He said the program had been reviewed by the government
broadcasting committee, which vets all television programs
for things like pornography or the "desecration of
religion." It was approved, he said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/26/international/middleeast/26CAIR.html?ex=1036636928&ei=1&en=4e27a62d7dc56aa6



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