September 10, 2012 12:28 by Simon Plosker
“If
a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?”
This
philosophical question could well be applied to the media’s treatment, or lack
of, concerning the latest barrage of rockets to be launched from Gaza at
Israeli population centers.
Three Grad rockets exploded in southern Israel Saturday night and early Sunday morning, prompting Beersheba and Ashdod mayors to shut down the local school systems on Sunday.
Three people
were hurt while running for shelter and four were treated for shock. A Netivot home
sustained extensive damage but, remarkably, a resident, alone at home at
the time of the hit, was left unhurt.
But
unless you are Israeli or follow the Israeli press, the likelihood that you
have heard of the weekend’s events is close to nil. Despite the international
media being around to hear the tree falling in the forest, it still made no
sound as none of the major media outlets bothered to report on it.
Not
the New York Times, which
preferred to focus in great detail on Gaza’s poverty, omitting any mention of
rocket fire. Not The Times of London, which
insultingly published a trivial and irrelevant story on Israeli ultra-orthodox
women adopting Kate Middleton, the Duchess of Cambridge, as a fashion icon.
And
not the BBC, CNN, LA Times or Washington Post.
Also
unsurprising that smaller news outlets failed to note the weekend’s events
considering that the Associated Press wire
service that feeds stories to a huge number of other media, gave the story a
mere five sentences.
You
can bet, however, that any major Israeli military operation in defense of its
citizens to put an end to rocket fire, that results in loss of Palestinian
life, terrorists or otherwise, will make headlines.
Why
is this important? In the eyes of the general public, Israel is perceived as
the aggressor, striking out at Palestinians in Gaza with little provocation.
Wouldn’t they see it differently if the media bothered to report on the fact
that so far in 2012, terrorists in Gaza have fired at least 557 explosives at
Israeli civilian targets?
Indeed,
since 2001, Hamas and the other terrorist groups have fired over 13,000 rockets
and mortars at Israeli towns and cities, killing dozens of
civilians.
Just
because this has been going on for far too long, it does not absolve the media
from acknowledging that it is happening, because without the coverage, the
context behind the next story vanishes.
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