May 3, 2011, 4:56pm 

 <http://blogs.forward.com/sisterhood-blog/137458/> Jewish Angle Missing
>From '60 Minutes' Piece on Lara Logan 


By Elana Maryles Sztokman


 
<http://forward.com/workspace/assets/images/articles/blog-laralogan050311.jp
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Getty Images

Lara Logan

Some days I think, Jews are the new women. Jews are like the woman in a room
full of men, the ones who are supposed to stay quiet and nice and not talk
too loud or even at all, not appear in any way strong or assertive, and
never make any waves. Just as society prefers women when they are passive
and submissive, the world at large prefers Jews that way, too.

I thought of this as I watched the
<http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/04/28/60minutes/main20058368.shtml> "60
Minutes" interview with CBS correspondent Lara Logan as she described being
sexually assaulted on February 11 amid the uprising
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/01/30/egypt-revolution-2011_n_816026.htm
l>  in Egypt's Tahrir Square. Her graphic descriptions of hands and nails
everywhere on her body - groping, grabbing, pulling and scratching - are a
woman's worst nightmare. She was the only woman on the CBS team that night,
and she was isolated from her crew and throngs of Egyptian men had their way
with every inch of her body, inside and out. It was a harrowing account, and
most definitively a woman's story, in the sense that it was her womanhood
that made her a victim.

But it is also a Jewish story - and, actually, an Israeli one.

That's because Logan recounted that what set the mob upon her was when
someone shouted, "She's a Jew! She's an Israeli!" There were other women in
Tahrir Square that night, and for all we know others were attacked as well.
But right then, Logan was a target not just because she is a woman, but
because she was perceived to be a Jew and an Israeli, and therefore fair
game.

What really upsets me about this story - in addition to Logan's experience
and the understanding of just how rampant sexual violence is in Egypt - is
that CBS and the interviewer, Scott Pelley, did not seem to care about the
Jewish angle. It was mentioned, just like that, and then forgotten. The
implications for what this means about being a Jew or an Israeli in the
world were just swept away, ignored.

The good news from this interview is that it is a real turning point for
women. The interview has cemented the idea that it is now legitimate for
women - even strong, professional women to speak out about being victims of
violence without being blamed. Logan described reactions of her female
journalism colleagues, thanking her for "breaking the code of silence," in
which professional women don't complain about being attacked because they
don't want to be seen as weak or unable to "take it," and they certainly
don't want to be told that women shouldn't be out there in the field. This
is true not just for war journalists, but for women in many professions.

However, my sense watching this interview was that while it is legitimate
for women to be victims, it is not legitimate for Jews to be victims. It was
as if that entire angle of the story doesn't even exist. Like the world
doesn't know what to do with it. When the voiceover said, "Someone in the
crowd shouted, 'She is a Jew! She is an Israeli!'", Pelley continued and
said, "She is neither," and that was the end of that. What does that imply,
exactly? What if she had been a Jew or an Israeli? Would that have made the
assault legitimate?

Women are thankfully past the point where the world can't hear us tell our
stories of victimhood. But Jews, and especially Israelis, are far from that
point. The reason, I believe, why it's okay to hate Israel is because Israel
represents strong, assertive Jews. Israel is like that woman in the office
who might be called a ball-breaker.

This is deeply troubling on so many levels. In terms of Egypt, Israel's
supposed ally, and these supposedly democratic protesters, I am concerned
about what kind of culture is going to accompany the new regime. In terms of
the media, I am increasingly alarmed by journalists' unwillingness to look
at Jews in the eye and see the truth about events.

I would have thought we were past this kind of disturbing bias, but
apparently we are not.




Read more:  <http://blogs.forward.com/sisterhood-blog/137458/#ixzz1LKqNMie6>
http://blogs.forward.com/sisterhood-blog/137458/#ixzz1LKqNMie6

 



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