UNESCO has accepted an Arab League request to 'postpone' (indefinitely) an exhibit on the Jewish people's 3,500-year connection to the land of Israel. The exhibit was to take place in UNESCO's Paris headquarters, and was to be co-sponsored by the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles. The exhibit was designed by Hebrew University Professor Robert Wistrich, the author of a seminal book on anti-Semitism. The 'reason' for the 'postponement' is that it could '
harm the peace process.'
The center sent out invitations earlier this month using the phrase
“Land of Israel.” By Monday, both sides had agreed to the term Holy
Land, and UNESCO sent out its invitations.
A day later, UNESCO
received a letter from the 22 countries in its Arab Group. They were
concerned that while the exhibit’s title was innocuous, the subject
itself was political, and warned that hosting such an exhibit in the
midst of efforts by US Secretary of State John Kerry to reach a
final-status agreement for a two-state solution undermined his work, as
well as UNESCO’s objectivity.
The same day, UNESCO decided to
postpone the exhibit even though it had met earlier with the Wiesenthal
staff in Paris to go over the final details. The exhibit was already
being set up in its halls, and it already had received a congratulatory
opening letter from President Shimon Peres.
In a letter, Hier
immediately called on Bokova to reconsider and not cave in to the
“bullying” of the Arab Group, particularly given that UNESCO experts
had already vetted and approved the exhibit. He recalled how he had
obtained her verbal approval in October 2011, on the same day that
UNESCO member states voted to recognize “Palestine” as a state and
accord it full membership rights.
That approval, he wrote, was
followed by a public signing ceremony in 2012 at the Museum of Tolerance
in Los Angeles. Hier provided The Jerusalem Post with a photograph
from that event, which showed Bokova standing by a panel for the
exhibit.
“Let’s be clear,” Hier wrote in his letter to Bokova,
“the Arab Group’s protest is not over any particular content in the
exhibition, but rather the very idea of it – that the Jewish people did
not come to the Holy Land only after the Nazi Holocaust, but trace
their historical and cultural roots in that land for three-anda- half
millennia. If anything will derail hopes for peace and reconciliation
among the people of the Middle East, it will be by surrendering to the
forces of extremism and torpedoing the opening of this exhibition –
jointly vetted and co-organized by UNESCO and the Simon Wiesenthal
Center.”
Bokova, in turn, said UNESCO successfully works with many
Jewish groups, and just this November held an event with B’nai B’rith
about the Yiddish language. But, she said, consensus was important to
the organization.
“Having in mind the delicate phase that the
peace negotiations are entering, I have no choice but to take seriously
the concerns raised in the letter of the chairperson of the Arab
Group,” she wrote.
Israel, which is sponsoring the exhibit along with Canada and Montenegro, expressed dissatisfaction.
“We
regret that such an important exhibition has been undermined by
inappropriate considerations,” said Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal
Palmor, “and we hope a solution can be found to enable UNESCO to hold
the exhibit as originally planned.”
Canada had no response as of press time.
If
the exhibit does not open on January 20, the Wiesenthal Center plans
to hold press conferences in Paris and Los Angeles to show it to the
media.
Read the whole thing. Disgraceful.
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