Why is the Right attacking Michael Rosen – again?

JVL Introduction

Michael Rosen, renowned author, teacher of creative writing, who has, among many other things, helped make the Holocaust’s horrors accessible to children has been attacked by the right wing once again.  Of course, all his many years of contribution, his research into and writing about his own family’s experience of the Nazi Holocaust, his support for the NHS, especially following his serious experience of COVID, his helping to bring many children to the joy and excitement of reading and writing and much more count for nothing because he broadly supports Jeremy Corbyn and supports justice for Palestinians.

The attackers are trying to link the tragedy of Peter Newbon taking his own life with Rosen’s complaint about the scurrilous attack Newbon made on Jeremy Corbyn.  Newbon is a University lecturer who was involved in Labour Against Antisemitism.  The complaint related to Newbon posting what had been an image of Corbyn reading one of Rosen’s best loved books “We’re Going On A Bear Hunt”  to a group of primary aged children and making it appear as though he were reading them Protocols of the Elders of Zion.

Skwawkbox has published this clear article about this latest attack, making the right points and asking the right questions.  JVL published Michael Rosen’s own blog piece  on the incident in May 2021 (see related articles below)

This article was originally published by Skwawkbox on Mon 24 Jan 2022. Read the original here.

The right’s attack on Michael Rosen – and the questions they are ignoring

Renowned author Michael Rosen has long been a target of venom from the Labour right for being a Jewish man who – though not a Labour member – supported Jeremy Corbyn.

And Rosen was the innocent bystander victim in one of countless egregious attacks on Corbyn when Northumbria University lecturer – and director of the anti-Corbyn group ‘Labour against Antisemitism’ (LAAS) – Peter Newbon chose to tweet an image that had originally shown Corbyn reading Rosen’s famous ‘Bear Hunt’ book to a group of schoolchildren. In Newbon’s tweet, Rosen’s book had been photoshopped to look like the vile and fictitious antisemitic propaganda book ‘The Protocols of Zion’, though it is unlikely that the photoshopping was done by Newbon.

But Newbon, whose profile at the time did not mention being Jewish or a director of LAAS, did not stop there. He also bastardised the words of Rosen’s book into a deeply antisemitic form. Rosen objected and asked Northumbria University to intervene – yet in the perversion of reality so common in the ‘Labour antisemitism’ smear campaign, the victim was cast as the villain and the bully, along with those who objected to the abuse directed toward one of Britain’s best-loved authors. Newbon launched a lawsuit against Rosen for his objection to what Newbon had done.

Tragically, last week Newbon died – and rather than leave his family to grieve in peace, the Labour right and its media allies launched a series of disgraceful and barely-veiled attacks on Rosen, attributing Newbon’s death to the reaction to his tweet – not mentioning or else deeply burying the fact that more than half a year separated the two – and casting its content as ‘satire’ or a ‘prank’. Some even implied – and a few baldly stated – that claims the content of the tweet was antisemitic toward Rosen were fabricated – a claim that would see any left-winger hounded in the same media were it to be made against a right-winger.

But the supposedly ‘professional’ journalists circling Rosen omitted to ask a number of key questions, or skirted them in the most oblique possible terms, in their eagerness to cast Rosen as villain. Others need to be asked of those engaged in the attacks on Rosen themselves. Here are some of those questions:

  • why are Rosen’s attackers linking events that are eight months apart and doing so as if it is simply a given, when there are other factors that intervened?
  • the coverage admits that Newbon was also being sued by someone else at the same time as he was trying to sue Rosen. Why was there no mention of what he was being sued for, nor any consideration of any possible implications in Newbon’s tragic death?
  • some of the media coverage mentions that Northumbria University gave Newbon a ‘final warning’ as a result of his tweet, as if that made Rosen to blame. But ‘final’ warnings are usually not ‘first warnings’. What else had Mr Newbon been warned for?
  • why did most of the coverage state that Rosen had called Newbon an antisemite when this was not the case? Rosen had said that the photoshopping of an antisemitic text onto a Jewish author’s book was an antisemitic act
  • why does the coverage fail to properly address the fact that Newbon was a director of LAAS?
  • another LAAS director had tweeted the BBC trying to have Rosen taken off air by the BBC, while yet another had tweeted mentioning the value of his house – an implication that they knew his home address – and implying that he may not have been able to control himself toward Rosen when he had seen him, if the LAAS director’s wife had not been present. Why did the media ignore this in their coverage?
  • why did the media underemphasise the fact of Rosen’s Jewishness
  • why did they fail to mention the long history of abuse by the rest of the pro-Israel right in and out of Labour toward Rosen – which includes verbally abusing him when he was an invited guest speaking to a parliamentary committee?
  • and why do the media feel free to dismiss Rosen’s assessment of antisemitism in the image Newbon tweeted when they would never dream of doing the same to a right-winger and indeed have mobbed and hounded former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn for suggesting even that some claims of antisemitism might have been merely exaggerated?

 

Comments (6)

  • Mary Davies says:

    So sad that the lovely Michael Rosen has to face this vicious bullying. Solidarity x.

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  • George Peel says:

    Because there are some ‘journalists’, so spiteful, they should never have been allowed anywhere near a newspaper, in the first place.

    Michael Rosen – another man among the best of us.

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  • Cormac Kelly says:

    I have always always enjoyed Michael’s poems and other articles in the journal of the NUT and now NEU. They kept me going both as a serving teacher and now I am retired.
    Naturally Michael has been attacked for standing up for decency and justice. It struck me recently that it must be very stressful for those who maintain the myth that Jeremy Corbyn is an anti semite knowing that allegation is untrue.
    The effect on a person’s mental health should not be underestimated.

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  • Hazel Seidel says:

    Whoever was most at fault here, Pete Newbon, who was sincere in trying to counter antisemitism where he believed he had found it, is dead.
    In your anxiety to clear Rosen’s name, it would be more decent of you to grant a space for grieving and reflection.

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  • Kuhnberg says:

    Hazel Seidel

    Those responsible for these latest attacks have not waited for the facts of Newbon’s death to be ascertained before giving vent to their assumptions. The claim that Corbyn is a proven antisemite is taken as a given; ‘left-wing MPs’ are blamed for whipping up hatred of Israel with ‘lies’ about the treatment of Palestinians, and Rosen is accused of having orchestrated a pile-on of his followers, when all he did was object to the way his book was used to associate both him and Corbyn with the authors of a disgusting anti-semitic libel on the Jewish people. Surely it is those who have exploited Newbon’s tragic death to launch these new attacks on Rosen who should be allowing space for grieving and reflection.

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  • Linda P says:

    The bullying that Michael Rosen and Jeremy Corbyn have received by the right wing is an absolute disgrace. Making the victim look like the bully and the bully look like the victim. Solidarity Michael a brilliant author and thoroughly decent human being.

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