And they're posting signs every light-year along the way back...

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:  Dang, two reports of bigoted Asians in one day? No 
doubt about it: no First Contact coming anytime soon. The Vulcans have 
definitely turned the ship around and gone home in disgust...


Anti-Semitic cartoons spur outrage
L.A. Jews and Korean Americans condemn a racist comic book published in Seoul.
By K. Connie Kang
Times Staff Writer

February 24, 2007

Korean American community leaders who met with a top official at the Simon 
Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles on Friday said they were disgusted by 
anti-Semitic depictions in a comic book by a popular South Korean author and 
vowed to mobilize community resources to launch a protest against the publisher.

Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Wiesenthal Center, met with the 
group and said he would visit Seoul on March 15 to raise concerns about the 
comic book. He said its publisher has an obligation to pull the book from the 
market and replace it with one that depicts Jews accurately. 

The controversial book, written by Lee Won-bok, a South Korean university 
professor, is one in his series designed to teach youngsters about other 
countries in a comic book format. 

The series, "Distant Countries and Neighboring Countries" in English 
translation, has sold more than 10 million copies, Cooper said. 

The images "echo classic Nazi canards like those found in [Nazi newspaper] Der 
Sturmer and 'The Protocols of the Elders of Zion' by recycling various Jewish 
conspiracies, like Jewish control of the media and money, Jews profiting from 
war, and even the reason for the 9/11 attacks," Cooper said.

One comic strip shows a drawing of a man climbing a hill and then facing a 
brick wall with a Star of David and STOP sign in front. A translation says: 
"The final obstacle [to success] is always a fortress called Jews," implying 
that they won't let anyone get ahead of them. 

Another shows a newspaper, magazine, TV and radio with this description: "In a 
word, American public debate belongs to the Jews, and it's no exaggeration to 
say that [U.S. media] are the voice of the Jews."

Korean American community leaders who met with Cooper said they were disgusted 
and embarrassed by the book and said they would speak to officials at South 
Korea's consulate in Los Angeles and in Seoul.

"I don't have words to describe the outrage I feel," said Yohngsohk Choe, a 
co-chairman of the Korean American Patriotic Action Movement in the U.S.A., who 
was at the meeting.

"The depictions are explosive. They have the potential to harm good 
relationships we have established with our Jewish American neighbors in Los 
Angeles."

The case became widely known after a local Korean-language newspaper published 
stories showing some of the cartoons.

Cooper said he learned about the book this month from bloggers in Seoul. He 
promptly wrote the publisher to "carefully review the slanders in this book 
that historically have led to anti-Semitic violence and genocide," and instead, 
"consider providing facts about the Jewish people, our religion and values to 
young Koreans."

Cooper said he was not satisfied with an e-mail response from Eun-Ju Park, 
chief executive of Gimm-Young, the Seoul publisher. 

In her brief e-mail, Park said the author had sent a statement of apology to 
Charles Kim, national president of the Korean American Coalition, a Los 
Angeles-based group with branches in major U.S. cities. 

Park wrote that she would look into the matter "more closely and correct what 
needs to be corrected."

Cooper said his focus was not on an apology so much as how to replace the 
"disgusting" and "vile" images with correct ones.

People who read the material in South Korea may not have any significant 
contact with Jewish people, but in Los Angeles, Jews and Koreans are neighbors, 
he said.

Cooper said he appreciated the support he has received from members of the 
local Korean American community.

"I like to think that we can make some progress in this area," he said. "I am 
not so much interested in that author, but I am interested in saying how do we 
now make sure that reality — the truth — gets out to that constituency?"

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