Thursday 5 December 2019
Holocaust Centre of New Zealand – Cartoon caused offence
New Zealand’s leading organisation for Holocaust education and remembrance expresses their concern and disappointment
regarding the cartoon published in yesterday’s New Zealand Herald comparing the proposed removal of approximately 350
trees from Ōwairaka/Mt Albert to the extermination of 6 million Jews and millions of Sinti, Roma, disabled and other
groups deemed less desirable by the Nazi regime.
While the Herald has since removed the cartoon from its website, the fact this was ever published is inexcusable.
This comes in a week where several other cartoons have been published in New Zealand news media in similar distaste.
This includes the cartoon in the Otago Daily Times mocking the devastating measles epidemic in Samoa, and that by Sharon
Murdoch in the Dominion Post depicting an image of David Seymour being kissed by Hitler and a member of the KKK.
This is unacceptable. Words and images matter. Genocides such as the Holocaust do not begin with actions, they begin
with words and, importantly, visual propaganda such as cartoons.
The fact that such cartoons are still being published in 2019 is concerning, particularly in the lead-up to the United
Nations International Holocaust Remembrance Day commemorations on 27 January 2020, memorialising the short 75 years
since liberation.
We need to hold journalism to higher standards in New Zealand. We need to hold ourselves, each and every one of us, to
higher standards.
It is up to every Kiwi to be an Upstander and to say that we will not tolerate this in Aotearoa.