Wiesenthal Centre
Statement Regarding
Egyptian Candidate for
UNESCO Director General:
"Not Only Hostile to
Jews and Israel - He
Failed as Guardian of
Culture in His Own
Country and Did Not Even
Protect Egyptian UNESCO
Literary Laureate"
Paris, 14 September 2009
The
Simon Wiesenthal Centre
has documented
expressions and actions
of an antisemitic nature
by Egyptian candidate
for UNESCO
Director-General, Farouk
Hosni. These cover his
more than two decades as
Minister of Culture and
include:
- his
characterization of Jews
in stereotypes of the
Protocols of the Elders
of Zion
- his
invitation to Egypt, of
convicted French
Holocaust denier, Roger
Garaudy
- his
insensitive description
of the Holocaust at a
UNESCO ceremony this
summer, as "a
transgression against
Muslims, a transgression
against Islam"
-his
allusion to the
newly-arrived United
States Ambassador to
UNESCO, only two weeks
ago, as hostile to his
candidacy because he is
"a Jew"
- his
reported prevention of
Jews of Egyptian origin
from gaining access to
their archives in Cairo
and Alexandria,
allegedly suggesting
that this could lead to
spurious claims for
abandoned property
- his
obstruction of cultural
cooperation and
normalization of
relations with Israel,
in violation of the 1979
Egypt-Israel peace
treaty
- his
notorious May 2008
Goebbels-style statement
to the Egyptian
Parliament – first
exposed by the Simon
Wiesenthal Centre –
declaring that, "if I
find one Israeli book on
Egyptian soil, I will
personally burn it."
- as
Minister of Culture, Mr
Hosni has done nothing
to restrain the
compulsively virulent
antisemitism of Al-Rahma
TV of Egypt, let alone
condemn it (see
children's programmes of
13 February and 6 March
2009:
http://www.memritv.org/content/en/tv_channel_indiv.htm?id=197
)
Minister Hosni has
denied, admitted and
justified such
expressions; apologized
then repeated them;
shown remorse in French,
but recidivism in
Arabic; even seeking, as
electioneering ploys, to
recruit endorsement from
uninformed Jewish
personalities.
The
above-mentioned examples
of apparent racist
rhetoric and actions
should be unacceptable
everywhere, but they are
certainly anathema to
that temple of culture
and dialogue between
civilizations called
UNESCO.
Mr
Hosni, as
Director-General, would
destroy UNESCO for years
to come.
Mr
Hosni is unfit, not
because he is an
Egyptian. The 1999
candidates included
Ismail Seragaldin, a man
of tolerance and peace,
now Director of the
UNESCO-sponsored
Alexandria Library.
Mr
Hosni is unfit, not due
to his enduring
hostility to Jews and
Israel – though that
should suffice.
Mr
Hosni is unfit to be the
United Nations culture
Czar, above all, due to
his failure as a
guardian of culture in
his own country.
A
coalition of Arab human
rights organizations, on
30 March 2009, issued a
forthright statement
from Cairo :
"Egypt: Nomination of
Minister of Culture for
the Post of
Director-General of
UNESCO is inconsistent
surrounding the trial of
a writer before the
criminal court".
"It
is ridiculous how the
Egyptian Government
nominates a person who
is unable to protect
intellectuals and
artists in his own
country, for such a
post."
(cf.
http://www.anhri.net/en/reports/2009/pr0330.shtml
)
The
signatories (The Arabic
Network for Human Rights
Information [ANHRI];
Hisham Mubarak Law
Center; The Institute
for Freedom of Thought
and Expression; and The
Egyptian Society for the
Promotion of Community
Participation) condemned
the Cairo trial of
novelist, Magdi
El-Shafei.
His
novel, "Metro", was
charged as "contrary to
public morals" and its
publication and
distribution were
considered criminal acts
meriting two years
imprisonment.
It
must be emphasized that
this author had been
awarded the 2006
literary UNESCO
Honorable Mention in the
category of African
comics.
(cf.
http://baroqueinhackney.wordpress.com/2008/04/18/cartoonist-in-trouble
)
ANHRI
had lamented that it was
in September 1981- i.e.
28 years ago - that "the
Government arbitrarily
jailed hundreds (of
intellectuals)".
[For
22 of those years,
Farouk Hosni was
Minister of Culture.]
ANHRI continued, "many
in Egypt still dread the
month of September",
when writers and
intellectuals face
Egyptian courts for
"promoting sedition,
undermining the state's
stability and violating
its "Law of Shame". (cf.
http://www.anhri.net/en/discussion/2008/h0904.shtml
)
A
year ago, ANHRI had also
protested the prevention
of a poetry and song
"patriotic unity"
gathering of
intellectuals against
extremism and sectarian
violence. Police
dispersed 80 cultural
leaders. Yet, Minister
of Culture, Farouk
Hosni, did not speak out
on their behalf.
When
the novel "Metro" was
officially and forcibly
confiscated from UNESCO
laureate El-Shafei's
publisher, ANHRI's legal
aid lawyer defined this
prosecution of literary
works as "completely
killing creativity and
freedom of expression".
(cf.
http://www.wordswithoutborders.org/?post=ShafeeTrial)
Ironically, this
September - the feared
month of cultural
repression in Egypt -
the Executive Board of
UNESCO, the same body
that championed 'Article
19' to define freedom of
expression, is electing
a new Director-General.
That
choice cannot be a
candidate, who is
charged with bigotry and
who has allowed – under
his watch – the
violation of cultural
and intellectual
freedoms.
The
Simon Wiesenthal Centre
stands in solidarity
with the afore-mentioned
Arab human rights
organizations - in the
hope that, at UNESCO,
wisdom will prevail.
The
Simon Wiesenthal Centre
is an international
Jewish human rights
organization with a
worldwide membership of
440,000. Established in
1977, with headquarters
in Los Angeles, it draws
the lessons of the
Holocaust to the
analysis of contemporary
issues of prejudice and
discrimination. The
Centre is an NGO in
consultative status to
the United Nations,
UNESCO, the OSCE, the
Organization of American
States and the Council
of Europe.
For
further information,
please contact Dr.
Shimon Samuels, Director
for International
Relations, at
+33.609.7701.58