France2 Accused: The Appeals
Case Takes Another Turn
Richard Landes
Augean Stables. March 5,
2008
Where’s
Israel? Asks French Appeals Court Judge
The familiar crowds gathered
outside the appeals court to hear the latest round in the Karsenty-Enderlin
slugfest in the Palais de Justice in Paris. Middle East Correspondent
of long-standing, Charles Enderlin, and his employers, France2 have
taken Philippe Karsenty, maverick director of Media-Ratings to France’s
notorious Defamation Court for “striking at their honor and estimation.”
Karsenty published a little-noticed article at his website in 2004 calling
on both Enderlin and Arlette Chabot (director of the News Services at
France2) to resign for having run staged footage of Muhammad al Durah
on the news. This picture – ruen again and again on Muslim and
European TV – arguably stands at the origin (if not the cause)
of both the Second Intifada, for which it became the icon, and a larger
wave of hatred of Jews around the world that some call The New Anti-Semitism
or La nouvelle Judéophobie.
In a surprising decision
that contradicted the advice of the Procureur de la République
(a supposedly neutral legal expert who advises the court), the lower
court found Karsenty guilty of defamation on October 16, 2006. Karsenty
immediately appealed, and in Judge Laurence Trébucq’s Appeals
court the case has taken surprising turns. On September 17, 2007, she
ordered France2 to show their Palestinian cameraman’s “rushes”
– his raw footage from the day. This crucial evidence which France2
had refused to release to either the public or to the Israelis, lay
at the heart of Karsenty’s defense since, although he had not
seen them himself, others, including three independent French journalists
reported that they were filled with staged scenes.
The November showing drew
eager crowds, including journalists from England, Germany, the United
States, Israel and even Dubai. Although both Enderlin and Karsenty debated
the meaning of the tapes, the court reserved formal presentation of
arguments for Wednesday, February 27. That day, a hot, contentious,
seven-hour long hearing pitted an extremely prepared Philippe Karsenty
and his lawyers against an nonchalant Charles Enderlin and his sarcastic
lawyers went on until almost 10 PM.
First up was a discussion
of the report carried out by the French court’s ballistics expert,
Jean-Claude Schlinger, which found no evidence of a) bullets from the
Israeli position, b) 45 minutes of constant shooting, and c) the impact
of Israeli military ammunition on the bodies of the two al-Durahs. His
conclusion: “It is very possible, therefore, that it is a case
[in which the incident was] staged.”
For most of the afternoon
Karsenty dominated the discussion. His Power-point presentation repeatedly
embarrassed France2. At one point even the News Director, Arlette Chabot,
came to the stand to defend her organization. Judge Trébucq’s
impatience with both Enderlin’s evasive answers and Chabot’s
straw men, put the advantage firmly on Karsenty’s side. Then,
in the late innings France2’s team struck back. Their star lawyer,
Maitre Szpiner (Chirac’s lawyer, also considered the best in France),
unleashed a volley of sarcasm and scurrilous innuendo that brought derisive
smiles even to the face of the two adjunct judges. (French civil courts
have three judges and no jury.) Following him, the avocat général
– the Appeals Court version of the Procureur – recommended
that the judges affirm the initial conviction against Karsenty.
While such an opinion
would normally weigh heavily on a court which most often confirms the
original decision – and had initially discouraged me greatly when
the avocat général and Szpiner spoke in succession –
this case is anomalous in every sense of the word, and therefore, unpredictable.
Judge Trébucq has shown an exceptional level of interest in the
case, and details of her behavior including a few slips, suggest that
she has her own independent position in all this. A decision is scheduled
for May 21, almost three months hence.
Before the court opened
the now-familiar crowd of al-Durah aficionados had gathered and pressed
around the door of the tiny courtroom. As the time approached, the court
officers found it impossible for the judges or court officials to pass
by. As repeated appeals and commands to back up produced no results,
the officers began to sound like school teachers threatening their students,
making them still effective. “Les français n’aiment
pas les règles,” someone mumbled approvingly. Only some
young officers, arms locked, physically pushing the crowd back succeeded
in opening up some space.
They let in a few people.
I assume I’ll get in. A journalist pushed up behind me. “I’m
press!” he insisted. “So am I,” say I who had just
received my PJMedia card via overnight express the day before. “Show
me your card,” says he. When I show it to him he snorts, “that’s
not a press card,” and tries to push through. Neither of us got
through and the guards tell us the case has begun. I stand there thinking,
“I just flew transatlantic to attend this trial and I may miss
it… this is impossible.”
Eventually the case was
moved to another, more ample chamber where, more than an hour late,
we began the proceedings at 3pm. There’s room for everyone, vindicating
those who waited with dignity and calming those of us who quietly panicked.
First up, questions about
the admissibility of certain evidence, most notably the work carried
out by a French ballistics expert, which found no evidence of a) bullets
from the Israeli position, b) 45 minutes of constant shooting, and c)
evidence of the impact of Israeli military ammunition on the bodies
of the two al Durahs. After a long recess, the court decided to admit
the evidence but not take testimony from its author.
At last Philippe Karsenty
delivered his PPP. Karsenty’s strategy aimed at showing how unreliable
the cameraman Talal abu Rahmeh was, and how inappropriate the confidence
that Charles Enderlin placed in him. Showing him shooting Pallywood
(Molotov Cocktail Kid), detailing his misrepresentations and lies, and
using heretofore unseen segments of interviews Esther Schapira conducted
with both Talal and Enderlin, Karsenty Enderlin expressing “100
percent confidence” in his cameraman as a first rate professional
journalist. At several points the judge, visibly impressed by what she
saw, questioned Enderlin directly. After Karsenty had shown the indisputable
Pallywood scene of the “hole in the wall,” he then showed
a clip of how Enderlin and France2 had used the final sequence of the
man firing into the empty room as real news footage in a broadcast the
following day.
“One gets a little
bit this impression that something is not quite as it should be,”
commented Judge Trebucq with exquisite understatement. Then, turning
to Enderlin: “Would you care to comment on that?” His answer
was classic Enderlin and one of the main themes of the afternoon: “They
are all professionals, their work is used by organizations throughout
the world. And I can assure you,” he said in response to the evidence
of the footage that the Palestinians shoot in the air for effect, “that
they don’t just fire off their guns for nothing.”
He pursued his line of
argument. Talal is a completely reliable journalist “from whom
we have never had any problem.” I can assure you that if the Israelis
had even a hint of suspicion that Talal was staging material –
especially this – they would have withdrawn his press card and
confined him to Gaza at the very least.” (In a subsequent conversation
with the head of the Government Press Office, I learned that indeed
Talal had his press credentials withdrawn specifically because of his
behavior in the al Durah affair.) “If Talal were a member of a
terrorist organization or working with them,” Enderlin continued,
“you can be sure that the Shin Bet would have a file on him, but
his record is white as snow.”
Indeed one of the major
arguments the France2 team used repeatedly that day focused on the Israeli
silence. I can guarantee you, Enderlin intoned, that the Israelis took
away the journalist accreditation of all the Palestinian stringers once
the Intifada happened… I can assure you that the Israelis would
not deprive themselves of any occasion to defend their position. [Note
that GPO Director Danny Seaman did remove all the press credentials
of the Palestinian stringers, specifically because they had no journalistic
training and they violated journalistic ethics with abandon. But he
received enormous hostility for this act from within the Israeli government
(see discussion in Stephanie Gutman’s The Other War).]
The weight of the Israeli
silence in the French courtroom became so heavy that even the judge,
in genuine puzzlement, asked Karsenty, “Why don’t the Israelis
argue their case? Why haven’t they said anything?”
Karsenty, who has been
disappointed by the passivity of the Israelis in the face of this problem,
responded as well as he could. “At the beginning, they were trying
to negotiate with the Palestinians, and it doesn’t help to accuse
your desired partners of having faked the death of a cherished martyr.”
“Not possible,” responded Enderlin, “I wrote a book
on the matter, and the Israelis didn’t negotiate with the Palestinians
until December.” Intervened Judge Trebucq with unexpected penetration,
“You don’t have to be formally negotiating in order to have
your behavior influenced by the effort to negotiate.”
Karsenty pursued his difficult
explanation for the Israelis behavior: “They didn’t realize
how bad it was.” “Ridiculous,” shot back Enderlin,
“it was obvious to everyone how big an impact this story had.”
(Precisely. Note that
Enderin had previously responded to my comments on how devastating his
story’s impact, by insisting that his modest broadcast had not
actually had that big an effect. Here, for the sake of a minor point,
he admits a devastating point. Cf. the joke (cited by Freud in Wit and
its Relationship to the Unconscious) about the marriage broker who tells
his assistant to emphasize everything he says, and when he admits that
the prospective bride whose praises he has sung so glowingly might have
a small defect, a “little hump,” the assistant booms, “what
a hump!”)
In fact, Israelis repeatedly
express astonishment at why Jews from the diaspora care about setting
this record straight when they just wish it would go away. When they
realize how powerful the impact not only on Israel, but on Jews around
the world, they express surprise. As Karsenty later explained to the
judges, “The day after al Durah, one of my employees came into
the office and challenged me, ‘Look at what your army has done,
murdering an innocent child!’” In Brussels, a rabbi was
attacked the next day on the way to New Year’s services, never
having seen the footage.
That’s the core
of the blood libel: a Jew deliberately murders an innocent child, and
all Jews everywhere are held responsible. Five days later crowds of
immigrant Muslims and European leftists would hold a huge banner aloft
in Place de la République with a Star of David = Swastika = picture
of the al Durahs behind the barrel, shouting “Death to Israel!
Death to the Jews!”

Few things illustrate
better the problems faced by outsiders trying to understand the Middle
East than this dialogue of the deaf about the Israeli silence. For any
outsider it’s obvious that anyone unjustly accused would respond
to those accusations with indignation, that if an army were accused
of mercilessly murdering civilians based on a staged scene, that army
would defend its honor. And for Europeans, fed on images of brutal and
oppressive Israelis, the idea that they would not retaliate against
both the Palestinians and the media if they believed they were wronged,
seems unimaginable. It is Enderlin’s strongest weapon, and it
clearly it impressed the judges. Who would imagine that Israeli official
circles felt somewhat like Kafka’s Joseph K., accused of crimes
according to rules of evidence they do not understand, presumed guilty,
incapable of articulating an effective response, demoralized and paralyzed
by the relentlessness of the attacks.
Karsenty’s presentation,
which at times went into rather close detail, seems to have engaged
Judge Trebucq. She asks for repeated clarification, precisions on the
date of the film, and although on several occasions she told Philippe
to skip over certain written elements of his presentation, she allowed
all and lengthy video passages to play with his commentary. If she has
shown a great deal of impatience with him in the past, here, even her
impatience seems sympathetic. And Karsenty, as opposed to previous occasions,
mostly followed her wishes and moved on without protest.
After Karsenty’s
presentation, the court viewed a 10-minute video prepared by France2.
The France2 video, now
available at Charles Enderlin’s blog, is actually incoherent.
It’s a carefully prepared version of what Enderlin tried to do
in court the previous November: a patter of explanation aimed at telling
the viewer how to think about what they see as it flashes by. Overall
there is no argument other than, “this is authentic footage and
here’s more or less what it tells us.”
Slick, unconcerned with
the details of date and time and provenance, all of which Karsenty carefully
supplied, the video glossed over the problematic evidence with breezy
lines rather than substance. Responding to the laughter that greeted
Endlerlin’s explanation that the standers-by are yelling “The
boy is dead, the boy is dead” before he’s even been hit,
the movie repeats his assertion with confident authority: “which
in spoken Arabic, means, ‘the boy is in danger of dying.’”
Sometimes France2 shows
how little it understands the larger issues. Repeatedly, the narrator
points out that there were other cameramen there that day. But such
an observation works in favor of the thesis of staging. If so many cameramen
were there, why was Talal the only one to get footage of this 45 minute
ordeal.
Which relates to the question
why Talal got so little footage of the 45 minute ordeal of “bullets
like rain”? Enderlin had previously told me that Talal’s
batteries ran out, implying he couldn’t film any more. Since the
rushes have a sequence after the evacuation, this explanation needed
clarification. Both Enderlin in court, and the narrator of the tape
make the same claim that his batteries ran out, and by the time he changed
them, the ambulance had already taken them away.”
On the face of it, the
argument is absurd. How many seconds does it take a practiced cameraman
to change batteries? How long does it take an ambulance to evacuate
a dead child and a badly wounded father?)
But one details of France2’s
10 minute prepared tape reveals most clearly how little they “get
it.” I had previously claimed that among the material France2
had cut from the tape it presented to court, was Talal’s version
of the Molotov Cocktail Kid. In fact, Karsenty informs me, it came right
at the beginning of the footage, and apparently France2’s lawyers
had blocked my view at just that moment. I had assumed that they cut
this because it was so obviously fake, like the other scene they did
cut. But I was wrong.
On the contrary, France2
used footage from the Molotov Cocktail Kid twice (at 00:33-40 and 01:44-52),
while the narrator claims that “seven were killed and several
hundreds wounded.”
As far as I know, only
one (Palestinian policeman who was shooting at Israel and killed by
a sniper) was killed that day, and the NYT, which believed that both
Muhammad and the ambulance driver were killed, reported three dead.
I challenge France2 to produce the names of these dead people and any
contemporary evidence (e.g., from Btselem) that seven were killed at
Netzarim. As for the hundreds of wounded, that only makes sense if you
believe the Pallywood scenes.
Here, fighting charges
of being duped by Pallywood footage, they present Pallywood footage
as real and repeat (inflate) Pallywood casualty rates. The emperor’s
not not only dressed… his clothes are most impressive.
When the video presentations
are over, the Judge allows Enderlin and Karsenty to make a personal
statement of no more than 10 minutes. Enderlin repeats his main points
– total confidence in Talal, if the Israelis knew it was a fake
they’d have done something, and the father Jamal is ready to have
the boy exhumed to prove it is his son and “once and for all put
an end to this nonsense.” He then sits down without addressing
a single concrete challenge posed by Karsenty.
(Digging up the boy and
doing tests that show him to be Jamal’s son will prove only limited
points: that, it is indeed Jamal’s son buried there, not when
or where or by whom he was killed. Worse, if it’s Jamal’s
son, this increases the odds that the Palestinians killed him after
the footage was shot.)
Philippe, on the other
hand, uses his full time to articulate his position. Questions follow,
which is as close to a cross-examination as this court ever gets. In
this period, Karsenty has to field some heavy questioning in which he
finds himself drawn farther and farther into making claims that strike
even the judges as implausible. Karsenty claims that the boy in the
hospital with the gaping stomach wound and the guts hanging out is not
the boy behind the barrel. Enderlin and his lawyers jump on him; even
the judge seems disturbed: “Who is the real Muhammad al Durah:
the one in the hospital or the one behind the barrel then?” “I
don’t know,” replies Karsenty. “This is an investigation?”
asks Szpiner rhetorically.
“How much of this
footage is staged?” asks the Judge. “None of it,”
answers Enderlin. “All of the scenes from Netzarim that day are
staged,” claims Karsenty. Again, even the judge finds this hard
to believe. “So AP is has also sold out (ils sont vendus aussi)?”
she asks him sharply, showing a willingness to consider abu Rahmah a
faker, but not all the cameramen. “No,” Philippe explains,
“the AP cameraman is Palestinian; the agency, like Enderlin and
France2, are dupes.”
As he explains the workings
of Pallywood to the judge, one begins to understand the enormity of
the claim (and the difficulty for someone who assumes a reasonably responsible
media to imagine), that our news media would consistently clean up cheap
Palestinian fakes and present them as news. And if not on purpose –
i.e., they are either vendus or advocacy journalists – then just
how incompetent can they be?
In the end, one got the
sense that the very incredulity of the court in the face of Karsenty’s
claims about Pallywood and its pervasiveness explained how Pallywood
could persist even after the whistle blown. France2’s basic position
was: “We are a reputable firm with a world-wide reputation; Charles
Enderlin is a universally respected and admired journalist and author;
every major news agency uses Palestinian cameramen; Karsenty is a nobody
who has no business criticizing us.” It’s basically the
Emperor’s New Clothes: “Are you going to believe the official
word from the court, or this silly boy?”
Although ready to entertain
specific criticism about France2 and Enderlin, the judge seemed reluctant
to believe that both this incident, and the larger shape of Middle East
coverage could be so fundamentally manipulated. “Was King Abdullah
(who visited Muhammad’s father, Jamal, in the hospital and donated
blood) part of the conspiracy when he went to visit Jamal in the hospital
in Jordan?” she asks incredulously. “Are you telling me
the MSM would parade in front of us naked?” This very incredulity
makes Pallywood possible: since it’s impossible, no denunciation
of its existence can penetrate, and no correction made.
Then come the final arguments
of the lawyers. France2’s go first. Maitre Amblard, true to past
performances, shuffles papers as her thin, reedy voice stumbles over
arguments as insubstantial as they are predictable. Nonetheless she
reads extensively from the testimony of witnesses, including the ambulance
driver who evacuated the al Durahs and recounts scooping up the poor
boy’s guts. (Note, all this took place while, alas, Talal, the
only one present of two dozen cameramen there that day, was changing
his battery.)
It is only when we get
to Maitre Szpiner that we get something with gusto and force. Szpiner
has, throughout the afternoon, showed exceptional self-confidence, interrupting
with his powerful low voice that carries throughout the room, making
snide, sarcastic remarks that occasionally draw reproach from the judge
but faze him not the slightest. “Forgive me, I’m not a good
boy (sage),” he remarks with a mishchievous smile after one of
the Judge’s rebukes.
When it’s finally
his turn, he turns up the volume and booms out his summation. Karsenty,
he claims, is a “bitter combination of [the Holocaust denier Robert]
Faurisson and [the 9-11 conspiracist] Thierry Meyssan.” Members
of the audience, stunned by such a comparison, hiss loudly. Undeterred,
Szpiner continues his attack: the author of the graphological examination
of the handwritten testimonials from Gaza discerns an “Oriental”
handwriting – “how bizarre.” Still worse, Nahum Shahaf,
the physicist, has taken mannequins — giant “Barbie dolls”
— and put on black face… Why? Because, like many Israelis,
he considers the Palestinian Arabs to be “des nègres.”
Some in the audience again
hiss disapproval, prompting Szpiner to ask the judge to rebuke them.
She does so, without taking the occasion to ask Szpiner to address substance
and stop with innuendo. And, accordingly, he finishes his summary without
once addressing matters of substance. He even mocks the ballistic report
for concluding that there are “serious possibilities” that
the scene was staged. His is a masterpiece of the triumph of sarcastic
rhetoric over serious substance which draws at least as many laughs
as it does boos, including smiles from the two adjunct judges.
During the break, I ask
a woman smoking outside what she thinks. “Oh I thought his speech
was marvelous, brilliant.” “And Karsenty’s presentation?”
I ask. “Oh, it was a joke,” she replies. I guess we see
what we want. (Note, this man has a reputation for being the “best
lawyer in France.”)
We return to the court
and Judge Trébucq then turns to Karsenty’s lawyers to present
their case. “Wait,” intervenes the avocat général,
“it’s my turn to present.” A soft-spoken elderly gentleman
whom the judge must repeatedly ask to raise his voice, he quietly but
firmly, sides with France2 and accuses Karsenty of failing to meet the
criteria for dismissal. In many ways it is a rehash of the first court
decision, which, he concludes, the appeals court should uphold. Has
Karsenty done a serious investigation? No. Although his sources are
multiple (the original decision argued that they were all one), since
they all agree, it’s the equivalent of a single source. Did he
use serious and prudent language in his criticism? No, works like superchérie,
imposture, masquarade are “devalorizing and pejorative.”
Has he shown good faith? No, he seems driven by animus against Enderlin.
It seems quite striking
that in a courtroom where for the last seven hours we’ve witnessed
extensive, serious, and informed argument on Karsenty’s side,
and insubstantial and dismissive and excessive rhetoric from France2’s,
that here the avocat général would come down against Karsenty
for “lack of seriousness and prudence.” His legal reasoning
is a pastiche of cliché and poorly reasoned assertions. Whatever
his motives, the consequences of his judgment may be heavy. Courts rarely
reverse direct advice from these figures (they did in Karsenty’s
case), and in Appeals courts, where the natural tendency is to confirm
the lower court’s decision, it would have seemed hard to imagine
the judges reversing this decision. And this was what I thought initially
and reported live by phone PJMedia.
But we have yet to hear
from Philippe’s attorneys.
They, like Philippe, are
well prepared. Maître Delphine Meillet reads a well-researched
analysis of how powerful the grip of Palestinian politics on the media,
both Palestinian and foreign. She quotes Talal telling an Arab audience,
“I went into journalism to carry on my people’s struggle.”
She tells the story of the Ramallah lynching and reads from the craven
letter of Riccardo Cristiano to Yasar Arafat assuring him that Italy’s
public station, RAI, which he heads, would never betray the journalistic
rules that govern the media in the PA territories, of not showing the
Palestinians in a bad light. She outlines the noxious impact this kind
of press intimidation and cooperation has on the ability of the West
to know what’s going on. “The victim here is the European
public.”
(This issue of press intimidation
offers a key answer to the false dichotomy of a press either “vendu”
or incompetent in its handling of Pallywood. Cristiano’s open
admission of self-censorship points the direction. Terrified of reporting
negative things about this political culture, afraid to confront Palestinians
by rejecting their fakes, western reporters face a dilemma which they
solve by pretending that they are doing the “right thing”
in leveling this uneven playing field. If, as Bob Simon says (in reference
to the Muhammad al Durah affair), “in the Middle East, a picture
is worth a thousand weapons” then journalists can tell themselves
they are merely leveling the playing field in a situation where the
Israelis have all the weapons. As a result, in all good conscience,
they can overlook, even side with and channel Palestinian propaganda.
It’s a fine solution: they avoid the anger of the volatile “insurgents,”
they “do good” for the oppressed,” and they get good
footage to run in the evening news.)
The lead attorney, Maître
Patrick Maisonneuve, goes last. Much of the speech addresses the issues
raised by the avocat général and Szpiner, on Karsenty’s
good faith and extensive and serious work on the problem. He critiques
Szpiner’s analogy. “It is grotesque to compare Karsenty’s
accusation that a Palestinian cameraman and a handful of collaborators
faked a piece of war propaganda with people who claim that the pervasively
documented murder of over six million Jews is a propagandistic invention.
Thank you, Master Szpiner, who accuse M. Karsenty of having lacked ‘nuance’
for this precious lesson in nuance.”
Indeed, one might take
that riposte as emblematic of the trial. At one point, Szpiner criticized
Karsenty for his lack of seriousness in referring to a news item that
claimed that CNN had turned down Talal’s footage of al Durah because
it seemed too problematic to run. “If he had made a simple phone
call, he could have found out from the source,” Szpiner boomed.
“That would have shown serious research.” (Of course, to
try and find out from a huge organization like CNN who made that decision
eight years ago is no easy matter.) And yet this same man spins a yarn
about Shahaf applying blackface to his Barbie and Ken dolls in order
to smear Israelis with racism, when a quick phone call would have revealed
that these mannequins were standard Israeli army issue, used to represent
anyone, blackface because they don’t show dirt. (After explaining
this to me, Shahaf writes, “Who is this idiot lawyer?” Good
question.)
Alas, in France, style
often trumps content: as Szpiner performs with gusto, the adjunct judges
smile. As one observer at the trial put their attitude, “Finalement,
il est génial cet avocat. [This guy’s awesome!]”
And I confess, that in a moment of dejection I gave a gloomy report
to Roger Simon. But further discussions with others, better acquainted
with the workings of French justice suggest I may have jumped the gun.
Signs indicate, for example,
that Judge Trébucq is considerably more sophisticated than her
co-judges, and she is aware of these glaring disparities. Despite her
sharp questioning of Karsenty, she rebuked both Enderlin and Chabot
outright for “distorting” Karsenty’s argument, for
not answering the challenges of the evidence. At a couple of points
she even made procedural slips one might consider Freudian: turning
to Enderlin when she should have turned to Karsenty, she addressed him
as the accused, and when she should have turned to the avocat général
for his opinion, she skipped him and went straight to Karsenty’s
lawyers for their statement. A number of the lawyers present felt that
Karsenty’s presentation had stunned the court and made a deep
impression on Judge Trébucq, who has accorded this case exceptional
care and attention and engaged in unusual procedures (e.g., viewing
the rushes). This case is nothing, if not exceptional.
She has given her court
a long period decide, and, hopefully, a long period to study the evidence.
It would take little time but close attention to look at Talal’s
shot of the barrel after the evacuation in the rushes (18:09), to realize
that testimony of the ambulance driver that he had to scoop up al Durah’s
guts from the pavement was a fabrication. Like other eyewitnesses whose
testimony France2 provided to the court, who saw helicopter gunships
shooting Palestinians from the sky, this is part of the lethal narrative
of Pallywood: a gruesome detail that intensifies our sense of pathos
and horror. But if indeed the boy’s guts had spilled out (a detail
Le Monde dutifully included in its brief report), there would have been
a river of blood on the sidewalk. And yet, France2’s own rushes,
taken immediately after the ambulance evacuation, show the father and
son have left the scene and there is no sign of blood either on the
wall or on the ground.

Photograph taken
the day after the “shooting.” Not only is the blood red,
rather than brown for having been exposed to oxygen for 24 hours, but
it’s only where the father sat. The place Muhammad, guts spilled
out, lay dying for 20 minutes is around where the men are standing,
with no sign of blood.
Does Judge Trébucq
have the intellectual and emotional fortitude not to fall victim of
this pornography of suffering that Pallywood’s greatest icon has
managed to spread around the world?
There is no way of knowing
how the decision will come down. If Karsenty loses, it will be the victory
of form over content, of an easy rhetoric of contempt over a serious
and substantive analysis of deeply troubling behavior, of institutional
prestige over individual right to criticism. After all, the court does
not need to decide if the scene was staged, but if at the time he wrote
the article, Karsenty had sufficient evidence to legitimately express
that opinion. That, to this American, is something of a no brainer.
But in the overheated atmosphere of Europe in the early 21st century,
rife with a rhetoric of demonization and dismissal, in a country where
a Philosemitic Protestant can be found guilty of anti-Semitism for publishing
at his website an article by one Jew (Stephane Juffa) that criticizes
another Jew (Charles Enderlin), it’s hard to imagine how anyone
could focus clearly on the relevant issues. To paraphrase Groucho Marx’s
famous query, “Are you going to believe France2 or your own lying
eyes?”
And in all this confusion,
where are the Israelis? Why can’t they find a voice that at once
defends their honor, and helps outsiders understand the dynamics of
terror that dominate this young and troubled century, terror’s
systematic exploitation of a Western media too weak to resist their
violent blandishments and too proud to admit error. Said one observer,
“Even Charles’ friends admit that not only does it look
like he made a huge mistake, but he’s much too proud to admit
it.”
A public institution’s
wounded pride or a people’s reputation? One heard precisely such
calculus about a century ago in Paris.
But in the end, as with
Dreyfus, the truth will out. As Maisonneuve, Karsenty’s lawyer
put it: “After examining the evidence there is no alternative
but to conclude that it was staged.” Occam’s razor here
makes any alternative a Rube Goldberg machine – impossibly elaborate
and exceedingly unlikely. So whatever French justice decides, as Sherlock
Holmes would say, “the game is afoot.”
And for that we can thank
Enderlin’s hubris in accusing Karsenty for “attacking his
honor and estimation,” and Karsenty’s tenacity in fighting
the array of institutional networks militating against letting the French
and world public know just how bad and dangerous media mistakes and
their denial can be.
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