Censorship of pro-Palestinian expression in Germany is a pattern of political repression similar to McCarthyism in the 1950s in the United States [ citation needed ] emerging in the 21st century due Israel's occupation of Gaza and movements such as Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions.
Using the justification of anti-Semitism (and so conflating criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism itself. [1] Economic and cultural sanctions on individual artists in Germany have been steadily increasing over the past decade.[ citation needed ] German culture institutions have cancelled exhibitions, [2] withdrawn funding from artists and cost artists and academics their jobs. [3] [4]
Hundreds of events have been cancelled across Germany, [5] and there has been ongoing public and academic debate regarding freedom of expression, cultural policy, and the conditions attached to public funding in Germany’s cultural sector. [6]
Intergovernmental Germany–Israel relations are grounded in the legacy of the Holocaust and over the past decade Germany has enacted several constitutional commitments to preventing antisemitism.
In 2021, the federal government formally endorsed the non-legally binding IHRA working definition of antisemitism, which has since been adopted by various public institutions and cited in funding and political discourse. [7] [8] [9]
Though a 2022 survey showed that only 27% of Germans believe that Germany has a "special responsibility" towards Israel (and that 36% of Germans believe that "What the State of Israel is doing to the Palestinians today is in principle no different than what the Nazis in the Third Reich did to the Jews", [10] in 2023 German government officials repeated their claim that the security and existence of Israel is Germany's "Staatsräson" (reason of state). [11]
Critics argue that the application of this definition in cultural and academic contexts has blurred the line between antisemitism and legitimate criticism of Israeli government policy (constituting the weaponization of antisemitism), [12] [13] [14] contributing to restrictions on pro-Palestinian expression and economic punishments for those who do so. [15] [16] [17] [18] [19]
In 2019, the German parliament (the Bundestag) adopted a non-binding resolution declaring the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement to be antisemitic. [20] This resolution has been used in a number of cases to justify restrictions on cultural events or to denyfunding decisions.
Debates on Jewish identity itself in Germany have been sparked by the censoring of many Jewish voices critical of Israel [21] .
Jewish artists Candice Breitz, Adam Broomberg, Nan Goldin, Masha Gessen, Yuval Abraham and Deborah Feldman have all been subject to deplatforming as a result of their criticism of Israel, underlying the German government's willingness to conflate political criticism of Israel with antisemitism, creating legal and cultural tensions. [22] [23]
In October 2023, German cultural workers signed an open letter protesting what they described as censorship of pro-Palestinian views. [24] The open letter cited cases involving the exclusion of Palestinian voices from literary and artistic programs.
In November 2024, American photographer Nan Goldin made critical remarks during the opening of her retrospective at Berlin's Neue Nationalgalerie, describing Israeli actions in the Gaza Strip as "genocide". She also criticized what she described as constraints on pro-Palestinian expression in Germany. [25] The museum later issued a statement distancing itself from the comments. [26]
In December 2024, artist Adam Broomberg resigned from his position at the Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design following public criticism of his stance on Israel and Palestine. Accusations of antisemitism were made by some groups, while Broomberg defended his statements as anti-occupation and grounded in his Jewish identity. [27]
In October 2023, the Frankfurt Book Fair postponed an award ceremony for Palestinian author Adania Shibli, citing concerns following the October 7 attacks.
Over 600 writers responded by signing an open letter describing it as an act of censorship. [28]
Authorities in several German cities (including Berlin, Hamburg and Frankfurt) [29] [30] [31] [32] have restricted the public display of Palestinian symbols, including the flag and the slogan "from the river to the sea", citing public order concerns and potential incitement. In some cases, courts have overturned the restrictions, ruling them disproportionate. [33] Human rights organizations, including Amnesty International, have criticized the measures as infringing on protected forms of expression. [34]
PEN International and Human Rights Watch have expressed concern that Germany's policies could have a chilling effect on artistic and political expression. [35] The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression raised similar concerns in a 2024 report to the Human Rights Council. [36]
From the United States, ARTNews reported in April 2024 that "Germany's art scene is tearing itself apart", [37] undermining the integrity of Germany's entire cultural scene due to the majority of funding for the arts coming from the Government.
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