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JERRY BECK
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Disney-inspired Middle East propaganda
by jerry
September 4, 2007 5:00 pm


Sadly, it’s come to this. Animation has been enlisted in the propaganda war between rival Palestinian factions, Hamas and Fatah. This shocking video from Hamas uses imagery inspired by Disney.

09/4/07  5:06pm
amid says:

hakuna matata indeed.

09/4/07  5:16pm

thankfully the animation is bad. like BAD bad.

09/4/07  5:31pm
Zekey says:

I didnt realize I had the sound cut off when I watched this the first time. It’s very funny to watch because it’s so freaking hokey.

Then I listened to it with the sound on, and felt sad. :[

09/4/07  5:37pm
:: smo :: says:

has anyone made a well produced cartoon as of late promoting peace and nonviolence?

if there’s anything i’ve learned from pokemon, it’s that fighting fire with fire doesn’t work too well. it can work but not well. but fighting fire with WATER that totally works!

if anyone has a project like this or is aware of one being put together by a non profit, i’d be willing to help. i’d like to do good work for a good cause vs crap work to make money if that’s possible.

09/4/07  6:14pm
Joe says:

Smo.. why not start your own? I’d be willing to help also!

09/4/07  6:30pm

The film promoting peace has already been made… Norman McLaren’s Neighbours. Someone should buy air time on this TV network and air it.

09/4/07  6:32pm

This ranks right up there with Farfur. Why do these people feel the need to drag children into this circle of hatred?

09/4/07  7:12pm
red pill junkie says:

First it was Farfur, as Kitschensyngk pointed. Then it was a video game released this year by Hezbollah, and then this. Damn!

Let’s not look at the political propaganda these efforts are trying to promote right now; or even if the animation has quality merits or not (let’s think this was probably done by self-taught amateurs using substandard means so objectively it’s not that bad, from an animation standpoint I SOLELY mean).

What’s interesting to me is how these extremist groups are now exploring different venues through the use of novel technologies to spread their “philosophy”. They have realized these are much more effective methods to ensure there will be plenty of future generations willing to keep up the fight long after they’re gone. And that’s a sad thing indeed.

But what really shocked me was when a man goes on saying “(this) is planting hatred among the palestinian children”, and suddenly a voice inside me screamed “what? MORE??”

Now let’s spark debate here (indulge me). Do you think a Hamas militant would reply to our objections to this short clip saying that it is not so different to american children watching GI JOE cartoons back in the 80s? How would you respond?

09/4/07  7:49pm
Esn says:

smo,

I know of a few projects that might fit the bill which come from Russia (I’m interested in the Russian animation scene - there are probably others in other parts of the world). Russian cartoons have for a long time tried to promote peace and understanding - pretty much since WW2. Since the 1990s, certain people in Russia have tried to promote ethnic tensions for their own gain. Many people and studios in the Russian animation community are starting projects which are trying to counter this, and to counter all of the violence-packed foreign animation being widely shown on tv screens.

Here are some:

http://www.bardin.ru/engproject.htm
“The Ugly Duckling”, an upcoming feature film which Garri Bardin is trying to find the funding for (the government is providing 1/3rd of the funding). I asked at the (now offline) forum back in early 2007, and was told that filming had already started despite the lack of money. Bardin’s a wonderful stop motion animator and great director. Pope John Paul II owned a copy of his film “Adagio”.

http://www.multiskazka.ru/ (page is in Russian)
“The Mountain of Gems”. A huge project by Pilot Studio, comprising 52 animated films of 13 minutes each (27 have been completed so far). The goal is to adapt a folk tale from every single ethnic group in Russia (of which there are well over 100). Each film opens with a short clay-painted segment introducing the culture and the land they live in. Since Aleksandr Tatarskiy’s recent death (he was the founder of the studio), the decision was made that the studio would finish every project which he started, and that all decisions will be made by an artistic council headed by Eduard Nazarov.

http://www.lull.ru/eng/index.html
“Lullabies of the World”. Another project which consists of a series of short films. It’s going to be released in Russian theatres this month. There’s a trailer of sorts over here:
http://vision.rambler.ru/users/suzdalfest/1/VTS_01_15/

All in all, I find the children’s programming in that part of the world very scary. The fact that these are made and allowed to air suggests that nobody over there particularly wants to avoid the radicalization of children, and that those values are considered acceptable in practically all circles. Which is, of course, the case.

09/4/07  9:06pm
Robert says:

Hugh Harmann’s “Peace on Earth” (1939) would be the earliest peace promo-toon I can think of. Can anyone think of earlier examples?

09/4/07  9:16pm
Nic Kramer says:

Sheesh, talk about “Education For Death”. What the heck is this world coming to?

09/4/07  11:11pm
Quiet Desperation says:

>>> if there’s anything i’ve learned from
>>> pokemon, it’s that fighting fire with fire
>>> doesn’t work too well. it can work but not
>>> well. but fighting fire with WATER tha
>>> totally works!

Yeah, but then I pull out my Pikachu and *totally* electrocute you. :)

As for the analogy in the propaganda world, use your imagination.

09/5/07  12:57am

Whoever made this stupid thing doesn’t deserve the tools they used; a really bad and disgusting film.

09/5/07  8:19am
Oscar Grillo says:

It is almost as bad as Aladdin.

09/5/07  8:26am
Matt Sullivan says:

This just proves how we, as Americans, must use our science and technology to develop alternate fuels, so we don’t have to depend on this awful, backwards part of the world for stability and economic growth.

These people are f***ed in the head. I can’t even fathom the mentality it takes to create this, especially when animation has a tradition of showing the positive side of foreign cultures.

09/5/07  9:10am
:: smo :: says:

thanks all for the responses to my comment! i’ll look through all those links. Stephen, and Robert; i’m definitely aware of the films you mentioned and yes they should totally get airtime! but i think we can make something new as well!

perhaps i should get on that.

09/5/07  11:45am
tom says:

Well, in the States animation has always been part of the propaganda machine, in political ads and politically themed PSAs and such. I think it’s a little sad, sure, but it’s got a long tradition here, and as we export so much of our television culture around the world, it’s bound to have an influence.

09/5/07  12:00pm
Ron says:

A little over 10 years ago I worked in what was at the time, the only animation studio in Israel- Bet Anima in Tel Aviv.(there are many more now thanks to the digital boom-one of which was started by Alex Orel: a former Pixar animator but that’s another story) While there I met some other animators an animation students who were trying to get things going and nearly all of their films were about promoting the then current Peace Treaty between Israel and the PLO. Most were student projects or independent films. I don’t know if they’re still around but you might want to look up: Israeli animation and see what you find. Some activist groups like “Peace Now” perhaps sponsor some of those peace propaganda films. That’s something that would be worth looking in to.

09/5/07  12:08pm
Inkan1969 says:

I found the full length cartoon over here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPQMhISuMcQ

In fairness, Fatah did have a serious problem with corruption, a motivating factor for them losing the election. The characterization of Fatah as corrupt rats probably isn’t that far off the mark. I liked the sight gag of that one rat accidentally pointing his weapon the wrong way. :-)

Nontheless, the cartoon comes off as fascist. That lion is so much bigger than the rats. It looked like he could’ve wiped them out any time he wanted (so why just sit around and wait?) The lion emphasized strength, and was like a god. I don’t like that message; Hamas is no god, we need to question it as much as we should question Fatah/Israel/U.S./Iran/etc. We need to stand up to the lion as much as we stand up to the rats. The Palestinian people shouldn’t turn to lion strongmen.

Palestinian children have a difficult enough life as it is. War based propaganda like this cartoon and (a lot worse, IMHO) that Fahfour show doesn’t help their lives at all.

09/5/07  10:57pm
Chris Sobieniak says:

> This just proves how we, as Americans, must use our science and technology to develop alternate fuels, so we don’t have to depend on this awful, backwards part of the world for stability and economic growth.

True, the internal combustion engine needs to be given a proper retirement in favor of what we could advance to.

> Palestinian children have a difficult enough life as it is. War based propaganda like this cartoon and (a lot worse, IMHO) that Fahfour show doesn’t help their lives at all.

These children deserve better than this. :-(

09/6/07  4:06am
bardhol says:

Haha, that’s great! Burn, burn, destroy, kill, maim, burn, pillage, *tear off head covering* - those rats sure are *merciless* motherscratchers! Sadly, you can’t make shi’ite like this up.

09/6/07  10:39am
Inkan1969 says:

bardhol makes a good point. I never heard of Fatah fighters tearing off women’s veils. One Fatah rat appears to aim his weapon at al-Asqa Mosque, something I find highly unlikely. These are cheap loaded images that Hamas is too fond of; the Palestinian equivalents of accusing your opponent of disrespecting the Pledge of Allegiance.

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