The Algemeiner reports:
The Imperial War Museum (IWM) in the U.K. removed an item
from its website this week, following complaints from a Jewish human
rights group about its offensive nature.
The description of a photo featuring men from the Jewish Brigade’s 1st Battalion from WWII opened
with the words “terrorist activities.” The Jewish Brigade was defined
as having been formed in September 1944 and fought in Italy under the
British Eighth Army — with this additional assertion: “Many of its
members went on to join the Haganah and other illegal formations.”
The poster, part of the museum’s collection on World War II, is currently inaccessible on the website. The IWM did not respond to The Algemeiner‘s emails about its removal.
But it was removed after Simon Wiesenthal Center Director
for International Relations Shimon Sameuls wrote a letter to IWM
Director-General Diane Lees on Monday urging her to “to withdraw this
offensive poster, take disciplinary measures against the apparent
antisemite responsible and make a public apology to the Jewish
community.”
“The Jewish Brigade under British command were heroes who
combated Fascist terrorists in Italy,” he argued. “They were eye
witnesses to the annihilation of their people as they joined the
liberators of the camps…” Samuels said calling the Jewish Brigade soldiers
“terrorists” is “the greatest Holocaust revisionism imagination.” He
added that the offensive description tarnished the museum and “betrays
the cause of British integrity.”
Jewish blogger Elder of Ziyon called the description “inexcusable”
and “outrageous.” The blogger berated the IWM for “calling [the
soldiers] future terrorists” while failing to give any details about
“how the Brigade was formed, how the soldiers trained and how they
fought.” Elder of Ziyon also criticized the IWM for referring to the
Haganah — an underground military organization in Israel from 1920 to
1948 — as an “illegal” organization. “It wasn’t,” he asserted. “At times
it cooperated with the British.”
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