CNN Errs on Israel Again
During the 10 a.m. CNN news hour on March 5, 2015 in a discussion starting at 10:52 a.m. about the CNN documentary “Finding Jesus,” guest Catholic priest Fr. Jim Martin, author of “Jesus, a pilgrimage,” at 10:55 a.m. used the erroneous phrase “first century Palestine” in conversation with CNN’s Carol Costello. Typically for CNN, Costello was either unaware of or unwilling to correct the error.
Misleading its viewers about Israel is commonplace at CNN (examples here, here, here, here and here).
The problem with the phrase “first century Palestine” is that it reinforces the false Palestinian narrative (and hence, resentment against Israel by the Palestinians and others) that the ancestors of today’s Palestinian Arabs, supposedly the Philistines, preceded the Jews in the land.
The ancient Philistines warred for many years with the Israelites from their 12th century BCE home territory in what is today known as the Gaza Strip (sound familiar?). The Philistines, long gone from world history, were not Arabs. They were most closely related to the Greeks originating from Asia Minor and other Greek areas. They arrived by sea to the coastal area of Gaza adjacent to Israel. They had no physical connection whatsoever with the Arab world. The Arabs now known as “Palestinians” took that name for themselves no earlier than the 1960s. Prior to the 1960s, if Arabs in Palestine defined themselves politically or nationally, generally it was as “southern Syrians.”
When and how did the land on which Jesus is said to have tread come to be known as Palestine? In the second century, the Jews fought against Roman rule for a second time. After the Romans defeated the rebellious Jews in the year 135 CE, they took away the Jewish name, Judea, and replaced it with “Palestina” (naming it for the ancient enemy of the Jews, the Philistines) to punish the Jews and to make an example of them to other peoples considering rebellion. Before that, the term “was not usually applied to Judaea, which in Roman times was still officially and commonly known by that name,” as Bernard Lewis has explained (“Palestine: On the History and Geography of a Name,” The International History Review, January 1, 1980). Since the name of the region was changed over a hundred years after Jesus lived there, it is obviously fallacious to refer to where Jesus lived as “first century Palestine.”
As a member of the clergy, Fr. Martin must be aware of multiple verses in the New Testament that identify the place where Jesus lived as Judea. The Bible version commonly used by the American Catholic Church is the New Revised Standard Version Catholic Edition (NRSVCE). Examples from this version show that “first century Palestine” is an erroneous phrase:
• Luke 1:5: “… King Herod of Judea …”
• Luke 2:4: “Joseph also went from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea, to the city of David called Bethlehem …”
• Luke 3:1: “…Pontius Pilate was governor of Judea …”
Furthermore, The name “Palestine” (or any of its variants) is nowhere to be found in the New Testament.
More from SNAPSHOTS
The Palestinian Authority Paid Terrorists $347 Million in 2017
January 9, 2018
A Jerusalem Post graph illustrating how PA payments to terrorists are calculated, with amounts shown in shekels The Palestinian Authority (PA) paid imprisoned terrorists and their families 347 million USD in 2017, Israel’s defense ministry [...]
Foreign Policy Fails To Tell The Truth About UNRWA
January 9, 2018
An image posted on the official Facebook page of an UNRWA school As its headline illustrates, a Jan. 5, 2018 Foreign Policy article, “Nikki Haley’s Diplomacy of Revenge Targets U.N. Relief Agency,” substituted editorializing for [...]
Where’s the Coverage? Palestinian Leaders Spend Christmas Celebrating a Terrorist
January 2, 2018
PA President Mahmoud Abbas meets with Rafat Al-Jawabra on Dec. 25, 2017. Image courtesy of MEMRI Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority (PA) and head of the Fatah movement, spent Dec. 25, 2017 [...]
Reuters Removes Photograph Implicating Israel in Deaths of Iranian Street Protesters
January 2, 2018
What do Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israeli Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz have to do with the deaths of 10 Iranian protesters demonstrating against their regime? That's what Twitter users were wondering after Reuters [...]
‘Crux’ of the Conflict, According to The New York Times
December 24, 2017
What is the crux of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict? According to a New York Times headline in yesterday's print edition, and online here, it is religious settlers encroaching on Palestinian land ("An Israeli Settler, A Dead [...]
Where’s the Coverage of New Jersey Imam’s Call for Genocide?
December 21, 2017
On December 8, MEMRI, the Middle East Media Research Institute, translated a sermon given in a New Jersey mosque. The organization summarized as follows: Sheikh Aymen Elkasaby, imam of the Islamic Center of Jersey City, [...]
DPA Captions Wrongly Blame Israel for Islamic Jihad Deaths
December 13, 2017
Deutsche Presse Agentur (DPA) published photo captions yesterday which incorrectly imply that an Israeli strike was responsible for the deaths of two Islamic Jihad members in Gaza. The photos and captions, distributed by major photo [...]
Reuters Rushes to Publicize Claim of “Israeli Attack.” You Won’t Believe What Happened Next
December 12, 2017
There may be times when "local residents" are good sources for a news story. But the death of two members of the Islamic Jihad terror group, killed in an explosion as they raced through Gaza [...]