Well, that didn’t go over well.
For months, publishing giant HarperCollins has been selling
an atlas it says was “developed specifically for schools in the Middle
East.” It trumpets the work as providing students an “in-depth coverage
of the region and its issues.” Its stated goals include helping kids
understand the “relationship between the social and physical
environment, the region’s challenges [and] its socio-economic
development.”
Nice goals. But there’s one problem: Israel is missing.
There’s Syria. There’s Jordan. There’s Gaza. But no mention of Israel. The story was first reported by a Catholic publication, the Tablet.
On
Wednesday, HarperCollins was backtracking fast. “HarperCollins regrets
the omission of the name Israel from their Collins Middle East Atlas,”
HarperCollins UK said
on its Facebook page. “This product has now been removed from sale in
all territories and all remaining stock will be pulped. HarperCollins
sincerely apologizes for this omission and for any offense it caused.”
It apparently caused quite a bit. On Amazon, the atlas has 39 reviews. Every reviewer gave it one star.
“It’s incredibly sad and sickening how one of the world’s largest publishers has failed to recognize Israel,” one reviewer wrote,
calling it a “travesty and international shame.” “Failing to recognize
its existence is horrifying and it’s a shame that in 2014, such nonsense
still goes on.”
How did this happen? Collins Bartholomew, a subsidiary of HarperCollins that specializes in maps, told
the Tablet that it would have been “unacceptable” to include Israel in
atlases intended for the Middle East. They had deleted Israel to satisfy
“local preferences.” [Emphasis added by Damien]
Strangely, however, the West Bank is
clearly marked on the map, but not Israel. Nobody can quite seem to
grasp quite what HarperCollins was thinking. “The publication of this
atlas will confirm Israel’s belief that there exists hostility toward
their country from parts of the Arab world. It will not help to build up
a spirit of trust leading to peaceful co-existence,” a British bishop
named Declan Lang, who chairs a conference that first highlighted the
omission, told the Tablet.
Others were less diplomatic. “What a piece of inaccurate garbage!” one reviewer said.
Source: The Washington Post
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Damien's note: One assumes HarperCollins had also been preparing maps of the United States that they will market in Texas and the Deep South, maps which will not show Washington, DC -- or perhaps anything north of the Mason Dixon line. Because local preferences.
I believe Fox News already operates on the premise that the United States consists only of Texas and the Deep South. Rather, only of old white people in Texas and the Deep South. When they draw their map, they have to leave out the cities, too, because urban residents even in their imagined US of A don't buy the lies and half-truths they peddle.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if this sort of stuff is more common than i know about.
ReplyDelete