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Cartoons

Syrian Cartoonist Ali Ferzat

Syrian Cartoonist Ali Ferzat COLOR © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Ali Ferzat,Syria,president,Bashar al-Assad,Bashar Assad,Arab Spring,cartoonist,hands,beating,revolution,Middle East

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Blog

Happy Birthday Twitter

Happy Birthday Twitter! Yesterday marked the social networking Web site’s 5th anniversary. That’s right, it was only back in 2006 that Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey purchased Simon Oxley’s stock art Twitterbird image and launched what would become a global network where celebrities bicker, athletes vent and revolutionaries band together.

At Cagle Cartoons, we’re big fans of Twitter (you can follow me @dcagle), so I thought we’d mark the occasion by presenting some of the best cartoons about twitter to come through our Web site.

John Cole’s cartoon of the iconic twitterbird showcases the importance of Twitter following the disputed Iranian presidential elections back in 2009. Twitter become Iran’s lifeline to the outside, a way for Iranians to tell the world what was happening on the streets of Tehran in real time, as well as communicate among themselves.

Twitter Iran
John Cole / Scranton Times-Tribune (click to share)

Twitter was instrumental in helping spread the footage of the death of Neda Agha-Soltan, who become iconic in the struggle of Iranian protesters against the disputed election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Arizona Daily Star cartoonist David Fitzimmons captures the symbol that Neda became for the Iranian people in his cartoon…

Twitter Neda Agha-Soltan Iran
David Fitzsimmons / Arizona Daily Star (click to share)

John Cole captures the lighter side of Twitter, as journalists accustomed to daily deadlines have quickly had to adapt a changing world of instant news 140 characters at a time.

Twitter Pulitzer
John Cole / Scranton Times-Tribune (click to share)

Recently, Twitter has helped organizers gather large crowds in the Middle East and overthrow dictators who held power for years. Dutch cartoonist Joep Bertrams captures this force in his cartoon…

Joep Bertrams / The Netherlands (click to share)

Meanwhile, Denver Post cartoonist Mike Keefe shows the implications of the growth of “social media” and Twitter…

Twitter Social Networking
Mike Keefe / Denver Post (click to share)

Keefe also sees Twitter as a de-evolution of human communication…

Twitter
Mike Keeve / Denver Post (click to share)
Categories
Cartoons

Khadafi Pinata

Khadafi Pinata Color © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Gadafi, Gadafy, Kadafi, Khadafi, Khadafy, Libya, Pinata, mexico, party, sticks, revolution, Arab, Middle East, Africa, bombs, Gaddafi

Categories
Blog

Khadafi Needs More Blood

Here’s my new cartoon about Libyan President Moammar Khadafi, who has not stepped-down amid protests for his resignation and turned to violence to defend his power. Fighting so far has claimed over 1,000 lives, and as both sides dig in, it doesn’t seem as though the conflict will end quickly… or with an end to the bloodshed.


 
We also have a great collection of cartoons about the ongoing crisis in Libya, which you can check out here.

Categories
Cartoons

Israel Battered by Peace Protests

Israel Battered by Peace Protests COLOR © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Israel, doves, soldiers, Flotilla, protests, mideast, middle east, gaza, palestinian, turkey

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Cartoons

Middle East Dialogue

Middle East Dialogue Color © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Israel, Hamas, Gaza, Palestine, Palestinians, Middle East, Mideast, Abu Mazen, Mahmoud Abbas, Barack Obama, Ismail Haniyeh, Hamas, Fatah, Palestinian Authority

Categories
Columns

Israel-Monsters and Arab Cartoonists

The conflict between Israel and the Palestinians still looms large in political cartoons around the world, with an endless flow of cartoons from Arab countries showing monster-Israel assaulting, eating, crushing or somehow decimating the poor Palestinians. The dove of peace has been killed by Israel in every imaginable cartoon — crushed, squeezed, stabbed, burned, eaten. Poor bird.

The conflict goes on forever, long after every original cartoon idea has been exhausted. Americans don’t see much of these cartoons because they would be regarded here as anti-Semitic at worst, or as the same thing over and over, at best.

I just got back from a speaking tour in Egypt, Israel and the Palestinian territories. At my first event in Cairo I spoke to a group of Egyptian journalists who brought a newspaper up to me, proudly pointing out that in Egypt, editorial cartoons are often printed big and in color on the front page of the newspaper. The cartoon they showed me would make an American editor choke; it showed a spitting snake, in the shape of a Star of David; inside the snake/star was a peace dove, trapped behind bars, and above the snake, in Arabic, were the words, “It’s not about the bird flu, it’s about the swine flu.”

I explained that in America this cartoon would be regarded as anti-Semitic, and it would never be printed. The Egyptian journalists were emphatic, explaining to me that the cartoon was about Israel, not about Jews — an important distinction to them.

“Israel isn’t mentioned anywhere in the cartoon,” I said.

“But we all know the Jewish star is the symbol of Israel,” they responded.

I said, “It is a religious symbol. It is the same as if I took the star and crescent off of the flag of Pakistan and drew a similar cartoon, saying it was about Pakistan.” The journalists didn’t respond to me, my comment was such nonsense. I continued, “This cartoon seems to say that Jews are snakes and pigs.”

“No, no! We have lots of symbols for Israel that we all know, like the Jew with black clothes and a big hooked nose!” one of the Egyptian journalists insisted with some passion. “We like Jews, we just don’t like Israel!” The Egyptian journalists all continued to insist that I misunderstood what the cartoon meant.

I later had an opportunity to meet with a group of Palestinian editorial cartoonists in Gaza by teleconference. I sympathize with their plight; the poor cartoonists had almost no outlets to print their cartoons. One of the Gaza cartoonists showed me a cartoon he was proud of, showing an alligator eating a dove. I told him I didn’t understand the cartoon, and he explained that the alligator was blue, “which everyone understands to be Israel” and the dove had green wings, “which everyone understands to be Palestine.”

I tried to come up with some advice for the Gaza cartoonists on how to get their work published. I suggested that they could submit their work to international publications, but that it would be tough if every cartoon was another Israel-monster cartoon. The cartoonists responded to say that in Gaza, they are under siege, and they don’t care to draw anything else.

I suggested that the Gaza cartoonists need to coax Western editors into printing their cartoons, and they would do well to consider some other angles; for example, drawing about their personal experiences and day-to-day difficulties. Palestinian cartoons criticizing Hamas and Fatah are rarely seen and would get reprinted.

I explained to the Gaza cartoonists that when the Israel/Palestine conflict is big in the news, and we post cartoons about the topic on our site, our Web site (www.cagle.com) traffic goes down. Americans are not very interested in events that happen outside of America, especially when it is the same news story, year after year. I told them that the most popular topic ever on our site was Janet Jackson’s boob, and that our readers really like cartoons about cute puppies. Hearing this, the Gaza cartoonists stared at me blankly, and then urged me to organize an international exhibition of cartoons that highlight their plight at the hands of Israel.

I spoke with one West Bank Palestinian cartoonist, Amer Shomali, who lost his gig with his newspaper because he insisted on drawing cartoons critical of Fatah; he was so frustrated that he rented a billboard to post a Fatah cartoon that his newspaper refused to publish. The billboard was swiftly taken down.

I met an excellent West Bank cartoonist, Khalil Abu Arafeh who draws for Al Quds, the big newspaper in the West Bank; he makes his living as an architect. Another talented West Bank cartoonist, Ramzy Taweel, breaks the Israel-monster cartoon mold, drawing about everyday life in the West Bank; his cartoons are seen only by his friends on his Facebook page. Ramzy could use some more Facebook friends; I encourage everyone to befriend him.

It is tough to make a living as a cartoonist anywhere these days — especially tough when the world has grown weary of what you want to say, when a market for your work doesn’t exist where you live, and when passions run high.

The fact that there is still a market for cartoons about cute puppies and cats who like lasagna probably doesn’t make the Palestinians feel any better.

Daryl Cagle is a political cartoonist and blogger for MSNBC.com; he is a past president of the National Cartoonists Society and his cartoons are syndicated to more than 850 newspapers, including the paper you are reading. Daryl’s books “The BIG Book of Campaign 2008 Political Cartoons” and “The Best Political Cartoons of the Year, 2010 Edition” are available in bookstores now.

Categories
Cartoons

Israel Vs Hamas Shoot the Doggie

Israel Vs Hamas   Shoot the Doggie © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Israel,Hamas,Gaza,Palestine,Palestinians,dog,Middle East,Mideast

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Cartoons

Carter and Hamas

Carter and Hamas © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Khalid Meshaal, Jimmy Carter, Ehud Olmert, Israel, President, Hamas, Middle East, Mid East, terrorist, Gaza, dogs, pee, sniff butt

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Cartoons

Iraq Field GuideCorrected

Iraq Field GuideCorrected © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Iraq, War, Sunni, Shiite, shiite militia, enemy, shoot, Kurd, Arab, Syria, Iran, gun, insurgent, Maliki, Bush, friend, field guide, Iranians, Turk, Middle East

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Cartoons

Middle East Checkers

Middle East Checkers COLOR © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,president bush, checkers, chess, game, arab, iraq, israel, palestine, saudi arabia, board, Middle East

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Cartoons

Hezbollah Missile Defense

Hezbollah Missile Defense COLOR © Daryl Cagle,MSNBC.com,Hezbollah, Hezbullah, Hizbullah, Israel, missile, rocket, war, mideast, defense, position, Middle East, crib, babies, war, Lebanon, Nasrallah, Islam, terrorism, shiites, ceasefire, conflict, militia, UN, United Nations