US calls Roger Waters Berlin performance ‘deeply offensive to Jewish people’
[ad_1]
During the show, the musician plays an ‘unbalanced fascist’, with a costume similar to the clothes of a Nazi. Cena is a reference to the 1979 film ‘The Wall’, which criticizes fascism. Poster for the tour ‘This is not a drill’, by Roger Waters, and scene in which the musician plays a fascist character from the film ‘Pink Floyd: The Wall’, 1982, during the concert Reproduction/Disclosure/Reproduction/Twitter O Departamento de The state of the United States ruled on Tuesday (7) over a controversy surrounding a performance by Pink Floyd co-founder Roger Waters, denouncing the singer’s concert in Berlin as “deeply offensive to the Jewish people” and accusing Waters of having a history of use of anti-Semitic rhetoric. Waters, 79, said last month’s performance, during which he donned a black overcoat with a swastika-like emblem, was a statement against fascism, injustice and bigotry and called the criticism “disguised and politically motivated”. Berlin police said they were investigating Waters on suspicion of “incitement of the people”. Online critics included US Special Envoy for Monitoring and Combating Anti-Semitism Deborah Lipstadt, who called the show a “Holocaust distortion” and relayed a tweet from the European Commission’s coordinator for combating anti-Semitism denouncing Waters. Roger Waters performing in Curitiba Giuliano Gomes/PR Press In emailed comments not attributed to a named authority, the State Department endorsed Lipstadt’s comment and said that Waters’ Berlin show “contained images that were deeply offensive to the Jewish people and downplayed the Holocaust”. “The artist in question has a long history of using anti-Semitic allegories” to defame Jewish people, the department added. Roger Waters is booed and applauded in São Paulo after showing #elenão in concert for 45,000 Roger Waters concerts in Poland are canceled after criticism of Ukraine The department did not respond to subsequent questions, including whether authorities attended the concert and how , and gave no examples of Waters’ alleged use of anti-Semitic allegories. Footage from the May 17 concert showed the famous singer and bassist pointing a replica machine gun at the crowd as he recreated scenes from a film based on Pink Floyd’s acclaimed 1979 album “The Wall”, a critique of fascism. Waters said on Twitter that the depiction of “an unhinged fascist demagogue” has been a feature of his shows since “The Wall”.
[ad_2]
Source link