Washington Post publishes, then deletes ‘racist, vile’ Palestine cartoon after public backlash

Post slammed for offensive cartoon by Michael Ramirez that dehumanised Palestinians

Last updated:
2 MIN READ
OPN THE WASHINGTON POST
Washington Post has taken down the ‘Human Shields’ cartoon labelled as deeply racist
Shutterstock

The Washington Post published and then deleted a controversial political cartoon, created by cartoonist Michael Ramirez, which depicted a Palestinian Arab, in an offensive way.

The character with a long nose and children tied to him were labelled “Human shield” in the objectionable toon.

A stereotypical trope

In the cartoon, this figure, identified as “Hamas” is portrayed raising a finger and expressing in a thought bubble, “How dare Israel attack civilians …”

After two days, amid growing outrage on social media and their website, The Washington Post retracted the cartoon, acknowledging its racist overtone and dehumanising nature towards Palestinians.

Openly mocking human aspect

Readers’ responses were furious, denouncing the cartoon as grossly misrepresentative and openly mocking the human aspect of the conflict.

“This is the most vile and racist cartoon I’ve seen in a while and it’s not some fringe outlet. It’s the Washington Post,” Dr. Omar Suleiman, President of the Yaqeen Institute, wrote on X.

Author and public intellectual, Nathan Lean added, “This is a deeply racist cartoon by the Washington Post. It repeats caricatures that have targeted Muslims and Jews for many years: angry men with exaggerated physical features; subservient, veiled women who don’t know better; the whole “human shields” bit. This must be condemned.”

“Dehumanising any peoples paves a way for injustices to occur. Unfortunate to see The Washington Post fuel that racist fire. This cartoon and the fact that it was published is appalling,” a reader posted on the newspaper’s website.

Opinions editor David Shipley expressed regret and offered apologies for approving the cartoon, acknowledging the mischaracterisation of the conflict and the offence caused, emphasising the paper’s aim to highlight commonalities and unity, even in tumultuous times.

Sign up for the Daily Briefing

Get the latest news and updates straight to your inbox