Current:Home > ScamsArtists’ posters of hostages held by Hamas, started as public reminder, become flashpoint themselves -Ascend Finance Compass
Artists’ posters of hostages held by Hamas, started as public reminder, become flashpoint themselves
View
Date:2025-04-21 20:32:16
NEW YORK (AP) — Making the posters, they said, came out of a desire to feel connected, to do something.
Artists Nitzan Mintz and Dede Bandaid would normally have been at home in Tel Aviv with family and friends, but were instead in New York City to take part in an art program when Hamas fighters massacred more than 1,400 people in Israel on Oct 7.
They channeled their anguish into creating posters bearing the names and faces of the more than 200 people taken hostage during the attack, each page blaring “KIDNAPPED” across the top. The goal was to invoke public pressure in hopes of bringing the abducted home. Fliers and posters based on their template have since appeared in cities around the world.
Posters of Israeli hostages being held by Hamas after the militant group’s attack on Israel the month before, hang inside a window of the Jewish Children’s Museum, Friday, Nov. 3, 2023, in the Brooklyn borough of New York. While posters of hostages were created to raise awareness and support, they’ve also angered others who are critical of Israel’s actions and history in the conflict with Palestinians. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
While they were intended to inspire outrage at Hamas and sympathy for the abducted, the posters have also become a flashpoint, angering people critical of Israel’s actions in the conflict with Palestinians, who see the posters as propaganda.
Pro-Palestinian activists in many cities have torn them down. Videos and photos of people ripping down the posters have, in turn, been circulated by pro-Israel activists on social media, who say the act is antisemitic.
Arguments over the posters led to the arrest of a woman at Columbia University, who was charged with assaulting another student. Another woman was arrested in Brooklyn last Saturday, accused of pepper spraying a Jewish man after he confronted her about tearing down posters. News stories and social media posts have identified people ripping down posters, with the aim of trying to get people fired or thrown out of their schools.
FILE - Posters of Israeli hostages being held by Hamas is handed out during a photo shoot for a visual project calling for their release, Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2023, in New York. While the posters were created to raise awareness and support, they’ve also angered others who are critical of Israel’s actions and history in the conflict with Palestinians. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File)
“When we see the amount of hate that we get,” Bandaid said, the two artists remember that “we put the posters there because we want to do something good.”
They worked with designers Tal Huber and Shira Gershoni in Israel to create the posters. They said that when they initially put the designs online for people to print out themselves, they included a suggestion that anyone putting one up not engage with anyone who opposed the fliers. But the nature of the response from some caught them off guard.
“Our campaign is not to run down Palestinians,” Mintz said. “It is just to take care of one aspect out of this entire mess.”
Posters of people being held hostage by Hamas after its attack on Israel last month is posted on the window of a store in the Crown Heights area of Brooklyn, Friday, Nov. 3, 2023, in New York. While the posters were created to raise awareness and support they’ve also angered others who are critical of Israel’s actions and history in the conflict with Palestinians. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
Rafael Shimunov, a Jewish activist who has spoken out for Palestinians, said he thought the posters were mostly being torn down to oppose a long history of violence against Palestinians. “Like everything in this world, there’s always portions of people who are motivated by antisemitism. But from what I’ve seen, overwhelmingly it’s people who just don’t want more war and more excuses for bombing civilians,” he said.
He said he wished the posters didn’t just focus on the Israelis “who were horribly, horribly brutalized and victimized.”
Since the hostages were taken, Israel’s retaliatory military strikes on the Gaza Strip have killed more than 10,000 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run Health Ministry.
A lack of water, electricity, food and medical supplies have created dire conditions throughout the besieged enclave.
Of the more than 200 hostages taken by Hamas, five have been freed. The fate of most of the others is unknown.
Mintz is determined to hold onto the idea that they can all come back to their families.
“With the hostages, there is hope,” she said. “We hope that all of them are alive. We are sure that some of them are alive. It has to be that.”
“All the families that we’re talking to, they share this hope until someone will tell them otherwise,” Bandaid said.
The artists put up many of their posters in New York City themselves. In some ways, the posters are an echo of the fliers put up in the city by desperate family members after the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001.
Posters of Israeli hostages being held by Hamas after its attack on Israel last month, is posted on a window of the Jewish Children’s Museum, Friday, Nov. 3, 2023, in Brooklyn, New York. While posters of hostages were created to raise awareness and support, they’ve also angered others who are critical of Israel’s actions and history in the conflict with Palestinians. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
Before the death toll of that day became clear, the signs asking for any information about missing loved ones were a way to keep the possibility alive that they could still come home, said Kevin Jones, communications professor at George Fox University in Newberg, Oregon, who has written about them.
He said the posters describing people as kidnapped covers similar ground, implying the possibility for a safe return. “It creates hope,” Jones said.
Holocaust survivors are some of those who have connected with the images. They were brought together Wednesday at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in an effort spearheaded by the Auschwitz Jewish Center Foundation. They each were photographed holding one of the posters, to be used in a larger composite group photo.
Jack Simony, director general of the foundation who came up with the idea for the photo, called them the “living embodiment of strength and resilience.”
“I felt that they would make exactly the right people to hold the pictures of the hostages,” he said, “to give a message to the hostages of courage, to give a message to the families of the hostages of hope.”
veryGood! (6)
Related
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Bowl game schedule today: Everything to know about the six college bowl games on Dec. 16
- Israeli airstrike killed a USAID contractor in Gaza, his colleagues say
- Belarus political prisoners face abuse, no medical care and isolation, former inmate says
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Prince Harry was victim of phone hacking by U.K. tabloids, court rules
- Convent-made delicacies, a Christmas favorite, help monks and nuns win fans and pay the bills
- Woman charged with stealing truck filled with 10,000 Krispy Kreme doughnuts after 2 weeks on the run in Australia
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Lawyers for Idaho murders suspect Bryan Kohberger visit crime scene ahead of planned demolition
Ranking
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Black American solidarity with Palestinians is rising and testing longstanding ties to Jewish allies
- Prolific Chicago sculptor whose public works explored civil rights, Richard Hunt dies at 88
- Prosecutors say Washington state man charged in 4 murders lured victims with promise of buried gold
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Quaker Oats recalls some granola bars and cereals nationwide over salmonella risk
- Bryant Gumbel opens up to friend Jane Pauley on CBS News Sunday Morning
- The 18 Hap-Hap-Happiest Secrets About Christmas Vacation Revealed
Recommendation
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Russia and Ukraine exchange drone attacks after European Union funding stalled
How much gerrymandering is too much? In New York, the answer could make or break Dems’ House hopes
Melania Trump says her experience with immigration process opened my eyes to the harsh realities people face
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar breaks hip when he falls at concert in Los Angeles
Colts keep playoff hopes alive, down Steelers by scoring game's final 30 points
Bethenny Frankel talks feuds, throwing drinks, and becoming an accidental influencer