Middle East Media Research Institute

Middle East Media Research Institute
Middle East Media Research Institute
Middle East Media Research Institute Logo
Founder(s) Yigal Carmon
Type 501(c)(3) non-profit
Founded 1998
Location Washington, D.C.
Key people Yigal Carmon (President)
Focus Arabic and Persian media.
Method Media monitoring
Motto Bridging the language gap between the Middle East and the West
Website www.memri.org

The Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) is a Middle Eastern not for profit[1] press monitoring organization with headquarters located in Washington, DC. MEMRI was co-founded in 1998 by Yigal Carmon, a former colonel in the Israeli military intelligence and Meyrav Wurmser, an Israeli-born, American political scientist. MEMRI claims its goal is to bridge the language gap between the Middle East and the West[2]. It publishes and distributes free English language translations of material published in Hebrew, Arabic, Persian, Urdu, Pashto, Turkish, Chinese, Dari and Polish, publishes analyses and reports on its website and offers specialized content for a fee.

MEMRI is one of several organizations that monitor and translate Arab news media. While the organization's translations are regularly quoted by major international newspapers, its work has generated strong criticism. Critics have accused MEMRI of often producing inaccurate translations with undue emphasis and selectivity and disseminating the most extreme views from Arabic and Persian media while ignoring moderate views that are often found in the same media outlets.

Contents

Staff

Based in Washington, DC with branch offices in Jerusalem, Berlin, London, Rome, Shanghai, Baghdad, and Tokyo, MEMRI was founded in 1998. MEMRI's founding staff of seven included three who had formerly served in military intelligence in the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF).[3][4] MEMRI president and founder Yigal Carmon states that MEMRI's current staff includes "people of the Jewish, Christian and Muslim faiths [who] hold a range of political views."[5]

  • Yigal Carmon — MEMRI's founder and President. Carmon is fluent in Arabic. He served as Colonel in the Military Intelligence Directorate (Israel) from 1968 to 1988. He was Acting Head of Civil Administration in the West Bank and the adviser on Arab affairs to the civil administration from 1977 to 1982. He advised Prime Ministers Shamir and Rabin on countering Palestinian militants from 1988 to 1993. In 1991 and 1992 Carmon was a senior member of the Israeli delegation at peace negotiations with Syria in Madrid and Washington.[6]
  • Steven Stalinsky — Executive Director of MEMRI. Stalinsky holds a M.A. in Middle Eastern Studies and a B.A. in Religious Studies.[7]
  • Dr. Nimrod Raphaeli — Senior Analyst and editor of MEMRI's Economic Blog. An Iraqi-born U.S. citizen, Raphaeli has a Ph.D. in development planning from the University of Michigan.[7]
  • Mansour Al-Hadj — Director of MEMRI’s "Reform in The Arab and Muslim World project." A Saudi Arabian journalist.[7]

The Board of directors and advisors of MEMRI includes Elie Wiesel, John Bolton, Ehud Barak, Norman Podhoretz, Paul Bremer, Nathan Sharansky, Mort Zuckerman, Elliott Abrams, Gen. Michael V. Hayden and Edgar Bronfman.[7]

Objectives and projects

MEMRI's original mission statement read: "In its research, the institute puts emphasis on the continuing relevance of Zionism to the Jewish people and to the state of Israel."[12] In September 2001, MEMRI replaced it with the current mission statement which states that the organization "explores the Middle East through the region's media. MEMRI bridges the language gap which exists between the West and the Middle East, providing timely translations of Arabic, Persian, Turkish, and Urdu-Pashtu media, as well as original analysis of political, ideological, intellectual, social, cultural, and religious trends in the Middle East."[13][14] MEMRI's goals and emphasis have evolved over the years; it originally translated articles in both Arabic and Hebrew.[15]

Concerning this change in their ‘mission statement,’ Political Research Associates (PRA), which studies the US political right, notes that it occurred three weeks after the September 11 attacks, and considers MEMRI "was previously more forthcoming about its political orientation in its self-description and in staff profiles on its website." PRA considers that “MEMRI's slogan, ‘Bridging the Language Gap Between the Middle East and the West,’ does not convey the institute's stridently pro-Israel and anti-Arab political bias.” It further notes, that MEMRI's founders, Wurmser and Carmon, “are both hardline pro-Israel ideologues aligned with Israel's Likud party.”[15]

The organization indirectly gained public prominence as a source of news and analysis about the Muslim world, following the September 11 attacks and the subsequent "war on terrorism" by the Bush administration. According to MEMRI, its translations and reports are distributed to "congresspersons, congressional staff, policy makers, journalists, academics, and interested parties." According to PRA, MEMRI's translated articles and its commentary are routinely cited in national media outlets in the United States, including the New York Times, Washington Post, and Los Angeles Times, while analyses by MEMRI staff and officers are frequently published by right-wing and neoconservative media outlets such as National Review, Fox News, Commentary, and the Weekly Standard. PRA writes that both critics and supporters of MEMRI note its increasing influence in shaping perceptions of the Middle East.[15] It has maintained longstanding relations with law enforcement agencies.[16]

According to MEMRI's website, most of the translations and analyses that it conducts fall under several main projects, including:

  • Jihad and Terrorism Studies Project
  • U.S. And the Middle East
  • Reform in the Middle East and North Africa
  • Arab-Israeli Conflict
  • Inter-Arab Relations
  • Antisemitism Documentation Project

Starting in October 2006, they added The Islamist Websites Monitor Project focusing on the translated news, videos, and analysis of "major jihadi websites".[17]

Languages

MEMRI monitors primary sources in Arabic, Persian, Turkish, Urdu/Pashtu and Dari media and other material from the Middle East, Asia, North Africa, and Arab and Muslim communities in the West. These include newspaper articles, sermons, speeches and interviews, websites, TV broadcasts, and schoolbooks.

MEMRI provides translations and analyses into: English, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Spanish, Polish, Russian, Chinese, Japanese.

Financial support

MEMRI is registered in the US with the IRS as a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.[13] They have a policy of not accepting money from governments, relying instead on around 250 private donors, including other organizations and foundations.[18]

MediaTransparency, an organization[19] that monitors the financial ties of conservative think tanks to conservative foundations in the United States, reported that for the years 1999 to 2004, MEMRI received $100,000 from The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, Inc., $100,000 from The Randolph Foundation, and $5,000 from the John M. Olin Foundation.[20]

MEMRI's U.S. income statement of June 2004 stated that its total U.S. revenue was US$2,571,899, its total U.S. functional expenses were $2,254,990, and that it possessed net assets of $700,784. Charity Navigator, an organization[21] that evaluates the financial health of America's largest charities, has given MEMRI a four-star (exceptional) rating, meaning that it "... exceeds industry standards and outperforms most charities in its Cause" when rated on its financial health.[22][23]

In August 2011, the United States Department of State’s Office of International Religious Freedom in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, awarded MEMRI a $200,000 grant.[24]

Reception

The organization's translations are regularly quoted by major international newspapers, and its work has generated strong criticism and praise. Critics have accused MEMRI of producing inaccurate, unreliable translations with undue emphasis and selectivity in translating and disseminating the most extreme views from Arabic and Persian media, which portray the Arab and Muslim world in a negative light, while ignoring moderate views that are often found in the same media outlets. Other critics charge that while MEMRI does sometimes translate pro-US or pro-democracy voices in the regional media, it systematically leaves out intelligent criticism of Western-style democracy, US and Israeli policy and secularism.[3][25][26][27]

MEMRI's work has been attacked on three grounds: that their work is biased; that they choose articles to translate selectively so as to give an unrepresentative view of the media they are reporting on; and that some of their translations are inaccurate.[5] MEMRI has responded to the attacks of critics, stating that their work is not biased; that they in fact choose representative articles from the Arab media that accurately reflect the opinions expressed, and that their translations are highly accurate.[5] The Washington based Institute for Research Middle Eastern Policy has criticized MEMRI for funding that is too highly concentrated (three donors account for over 58% of MEMRI’s income), lack of peer review and a reactive, tactically driven research agenda.[28]

Accusations of bias

Several commentators, such as CNN's Arabic department, have claimed that the transcript of the April 13 show (2007) provided by MEMRI contains numerous translation errors and undue emphases.[29]

Brian Whitaker, the Middle East editor for The Guardian newspaper wrote in a public email debate with Carmon, that his problem with MEMRI was that it "poses as a research institute when it's basically a propaganda operation." [5] Earlier, Whitaker had charged that MEMRI's role was to "further the political agenda of Israel." and that MEMRI's website does not mention Carmon's employment for Israeli intelligence, or Meyrav Wurmser's political stance, which he described as an "extreme brand of Zionism." [3] Carmon responded to this by stating that his employment history is not a secret and was not political, as he served under opposing administrations of the Israeli government and that perhaps the issue was that he was Israeli: "If your complaint is that I am Israeli, then please say so." Camron also questioned Whitaker's own biases, wondering if Whitaker's is biased in favor of Arabs -as his website on the middle east is named "Al-Bab" ("The Gateway" in Arabic)- stating: "I wonder how you would judge an editor whose website was called "Ha-Sha-ar" ("The Gateway" in Hebrew)?[5]

Selectivity

Several critics have accused MEMRI of selectivity. They state that MEMRI consistently picks for translation and dissemination the most extreme views, which portray the Arab and Muslim world in a negative light, while ignoring moderate views that are often found in the same media outlets.[3][25][25][26][27] Juan Cole, Professor of Modern Middle East History at the University of Michigan, argues MEMRI has a tendency to "cleverly cherry-pick the vast Arabic press, which serves 300 million people, for the most extreme and objectionable articles and editorials...On more than one occasion I have seen, say, a bigoted Arabic article translated by MEMRI and when I went to the source on the web, found that it was on the same op-ed page with other, moderate articles arguing for tolerance. These latter were not translated."[30] Former head of the CIA's counterintelligence unit, Vincent Cannistraro, said that MEMRI "are selective and act as propagandists for their political point of view, which is the extreme-right of Likud. They simply don't present the whole picture."[31][32] Laila Lalami, writing in The Nation, states that MEMRI "consistently picks the most violent, hateful rubbish it can find, translates it and distributes it in e-mail newsletters to media and members of Congress in Washington".[25] As a result, critics such as Ken Livingstone state, MEMRI's analyses are "distortion".[33][34][35]

A report by Center for American Progress, titled "Fear, Inc. The Roots of the Islamophobia Network in America" lists MEMRI as promoting Islamophobic propaganda in the USA through supplying selective translations that are relied upon by several organisations "to make the case that Islam is inherently violent and promotes extremism."[36]

MEMRI argues that they are quoting the government-controlled press and not obscure or extremist publications, a fact their critics acknowledge, according to Marc Perelman."When we quote Al-Ahram in Egypt, it is as if we were quoting The New York Times. We know there are people questioning our work, probably those who have difficulties seeing the truth. But no one can show anything wrong about our translations."[31]

Translation inaccuracy

The accuracy of MEMRI's translations are often disputed,[37] as in the case of MEMRI's translation of a 2004 Osama bin Laden video, which MEMRI defended.[5][34][38][39][40] Norman Finkelstein, in an interview with the newspaper In Focus compared MEMRI to the "propaganda techniques" of the Nazis.[41]

Following the 7 July 2005 London bombings, Al Jazeera invited Hani al-Sebai, an Islamist living in Britain, to take part in a discussion on the event. For one segment of the discussion in regard to the victims, MEMRI provided the following translation of al-Sebai's words:

  • the term civilians does not exist in Islamic religious law. Dr Karmi is sitting here, and I am sitting here, and I’m familiar with religious law. There is no such term as civilians in the modern western sense. People are either at war or not.[42]

Al-Sebai subsequently claimed that MEMRI had mistranslated his interview, and that among other errors, he had actually said:

  • there is no term in Islamic jurisprudence called civilians. Dr Karmi is here sitting with us, and he's very familiar with the jurisprudence. There are fighters and non-fighters. Islam is against the killing of innocents. The innocent man cannot be killed according to Islam.

By leaving out the condemnation of the "killing of innocents" entirely, Mohammed El Oifi writing in Le Monde diplomatique argued that this translation left the implication that civilians (the innocent) are considered a legitimate target.[33] Several British newspapers subsequently used MEMRI's translation to run headlines such as "Islamic radical has praised the suicide bomb attacks on the capital"[43] prompting al-Sebai to demand an apology and take legal action. He also claimed that MEMRI's translation was "an incitement to have me arrested by the British authorities."[44]

Halim Barakat described MEMRI as a "a propaganda organization dedicated to representing Arabs and Muslims as anti-semites." Barakat claims an essay he wrote for the Al-Hayat Daily of London titled The Wild Beast that Zionism Created: Self-Destruction, was mistranslated by MEMRI and retitled as Jews Have Lost Their Humanity. Barakat further stated "Every time I wrote Zionism, MEMRI replaced the word by Jew or Judaism. They want to give the impression that I’m not criticizing Israeli policy, but that what I’m saying is anti-Semitic".[41][45][46] According to Barakat, he was subject to widespread condemnation from faculty and his office was "flooded with hatemail."[47][48] Fellow Georgetown faculty member Aviel Roshwald accused Barakat in an article he published of promoting a "demonization of Israel and of Jews".[49] Supported by Georgetown colleagues, Barakat denied the claim[50] which Roshwald had based on MEMRI's translation of Barakat's essay.[49]

In 2007, CNN correspondent Atika Shubert and Arabic translators accused MEMRI of mistranslating portions of a Palestinian children's television programme.

"Media watchdog MEMRI translates one caller as saying - quote - 'We will annihilate the Jews,"' said Shubert. "But, according to several Arabic speakers used by CNN, the caller actually says 'The Jews are killing us."'[51][52]

CNN's Glenn Beck later invited Yigal Carmon onto his program to comment on the mistranslation. Carmon criticized CNN's translators understanding of Arabic stating: "Even someone who doesn't know Arabic would listen to the tape and would hear the word 'Jews' is at the end, and also it means it is something to be done to the Jews, not by the Jews. And she (Octavia Nasr) insisted, no the word is in the beginning. I said: 'Octavia, you just don't get it. It is at the end'". Brian Whitaker, the Middle East editor for the Guardian newspaper (UK) later pointed out that the word order in Arabic is not the same as in English: "the verb comes first and so a sentence in Arabic which literally says 'Are shooting at us the Jews' means 'The Jews are shooting at us'".[37]

Brian Whitaker wrote in a blog for the Guardian newspaper that in the translation of the video, showing Farfour eliciting political comments from a young girl named Sanabel, the MEMRI transcript misrepresents the segment. Farfour asks Sanabel what she will do and, after a pause says "I'll shoot", MEMRI attributed the phrase said by Farfour, ("I'll shoot"), as the girl's reply while ignoring her actual reply ("I'm going to draw a picture").[53] Whitaker and others commented that a statement uttered by the same child, ("We're going to [or want to] resist"), had been given an unduly aggressive interpretation by MEMRI as ("We want to fight"). Also, where MEMRI translated the girl as saying the highly controversial remark ("We will annihilate the Jews"), Whitaker and others, including Arabic speakers used by CNN, insist that based on careful listening to the low quality video clip, the girl is saying "Bitokhoona al-yahood", variously interpreted as, "The Jews [will] shoot us"[53] or "The Jews are killing us."[54]

MEMRI defends their translation of the show, saying: "Yes, we stand by the translation by the very words, by the context, by the syntax, and every measure of the translation."[54]

In response to accusations of inaccuracies and distortion, Yigal Carmon, said:

As an institute of research, we want MEMRI to present translations to people who wish to be informed on the ideas circulating in the Middle East. We aim to reflect reality. If knowledge of this reality should benefit one side or another, then so be it.

In an e-mail debate with Carmon, Whitaker asked about MEMRI's November 2000 translation of an interview given by the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem to al-Ahram al-Arabi. One question asked by the interviewer was: "How do you deal with the Jews who are besieging al-Aqsa and are scattered around it?" which was translated as: "How do you feel about the Jews?". MEMRI cut out the first part of the reply and combined it with the answer to the next question which. Carmon admitted this was an error in translation but defended combining the two replies as both questions referred to the same subject. Carmon rejected other claims of distortion by Whitaker, saying: "it is perhaps reassuring that you had to go back so far to find a mistake ... You accused us of distortion by omission but when asked to provide examples of trends and views we have missed, you have failed to answer." Carmon also accused Whitaker of "using insults rather than evidence" in his criticism of MEMRI.[5]

Whitaker claims that although Memri's translations are usually accurate, they are selective and often out of context. He stated: "When errors do occur, it's difficult to attribute them to incompetence or accidental lapses ... there appears to be a political motive."[37]

Praise for MEMRI

MEMRI responds to the criticism by saying that the media had a tendency to whitewash statements of Arab leaders,[6] and regularly defends its translations as being representative of actual ME viewpoints, even when the translations themselves are disputed: "Memri has never claimed to 'represent the view of the Arabic media', but rather to reflect, through our translations, general trends which are widespread and topical."[5] John Lloyd has defended MEMRI in the New Statesmen:

One beneficial side effect of the focus on the Middle East is that we now have available much more information on the discourse of the Arab world. The most powerful medium for this is (naturally) a Washington-based think-tank, the Middle East Media Research Institute (Memri), started in 1998 by the former Israeli intelligence officer and Arabist Yigal Carmon. Memri aimed to bring the previously largely enclosed and unknown Arab talk about the west to western eyes and ears: it is a sobering experience to read on the internet Memri's vast store of translations from many media, and to note how much of what is written is conspiratorial, vicious and unyieldingly hateful. Memri and Carmon have been accused of selecting the worst of a diverse media: however, the sheer range of what is available weakens that criticism, as does support for the initiative by Arab liberals. The Iraqi exile Kanan Makiya, for example, wrote in the spring 2002 issue of Dissent that Arab intellectuals have allowed a mixture of victimhood and revenge to take hold of popular culture, with few if any dissenting voices.[55]

Other praise came from Thomas L. Friedman, political opinion columnist for the New York Times, who credited MEMRI with helping to "shine a spotlight on hate speech wherever it appears."[56]

One of MEMRI's strongest supporters is Jay Nordlinger, the managing editor of National Review, who has written that:

Wading or clicking through MEMRI's materials can be a depressing act, but it is also illusion-dispelling, and therefore constructive. This one institute is worth a hundred reality-twisting Middle Eastern Studies departments in the U.S. Furthermore, listening to Arabs — reading what they say in their newspapers, hearing what they say on television — is a way of taking them seriously: a way of not condescending to them, of admitting that they have useful things to tell us, one way or the other. Years ago, Solzhenitsyn exhorted, "Live not by lies." We might say, in these new circumstances, "Live not by ignorance about lies, either." Anyone still has the right to avert his eyes, of course. But no one can say that that is not a choice.[57]

Nordlinger also notes that:

"It seemed imperative to learn more about the Arabs — to learn, for example, what they were saying to one another, in their media, in their schools, and in their mosques, The Arab world had always been dark this way; it needed to come into the light. And this is where www.memri.org proved "invaluable," as everyone has said...In fact "'invaluable' was written so often before MEMRI's name that one could have been forgiven for thinking the word was part of the name. MEMRI served as an antidote to darkness, as a way not to be ignorant."[57]

According to Nordlinger, one of MEMRI's early notable successes was its exposure of Muhammad al-Gamei'a. Al-Gamei'a had served as head of the Islamic Cultural Center of New York and as Al-Azhar University's representative to the United States and frequently participated in interreligious services. However, upon returning to Egypt in October 2001, Al-Gamei'a gave an interview to a prominent Islamic website in which he stated, among other things, that:

  • After September 11, Arabs in America could not go to hospitals, because Jewish doctors were making them sick;
  • Americans knew that the Jews — not radical Arabs — were responsible for the attacks, but were afraid to speak up about it, for fear of being labeled anti-Semitic.
  • "[the Jews] are riding on the back of the world powers. These people always seek out the superpower of the generation and develop coexistence with it. Before this, they rode on the back of England and on the back of the French empire. After that, they rode on the back of Germany. But [Adolf] Hitler annihilated them because they betrayed him and violated their contract with him."
  • "on the news in the U.S. it was said that four thousand Jews did not come to work at the World Trade Center on the day of the incident, and that the police arrested a group of Jews rejoicing in the streets at the time of the incident...the Jews who control the media acted to hush it up so that the American people would not know. If it became known to the American people, they would have done to the Jews what Hitler did!"[57][58][59][60][61]

MEMRI's translation of Al-Gamei'a interview were later cited by the New York Times. In order to ensure the translation was accurate, the newspaper hired "two independent translators" which confirmed the MEMRI translation. Nordlinger noted that MEMRI's work has never been found to be anything but honest, accurate, and meticulous and that because of MEMRI's work: "the sheikh was exposed." Nordlinger also argued that MEMRI "is worth a hundred reality-twisting Middle Eastern Studies departments in the U.S.".[57]

See also


References

  1. ^ english.aljazeera.net Listening Post on Gaza Flotilla, accessed Nov 4 2011
  2. ^ english.aljazeera.net Listening Post on Gaza Flotilla, accessed Nov 4 2011
  3. ^ a b c d Brian Whitaker, Selective Memri, Guardian Unlimited, Monday August 12, 2002
  4. ^ Memri.org Mission Statement, at web.archive.org, accessed Dec 2 1998
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Email debate: Yigal Carmon and Brian Whitaker at Guardian Unlimited, January 28, 2003
  6. ^ a b One on One with Yigal Carmon: If MEMRI serves... Jerusalem Post, Nov. 16, 2006
  7. ^ a b c d [1]"MEMRI Website - About Us]
  8. ^ William B. Quandt, The Middle East: Ten Years after Camp David, Brookings Institution Press, 1988, ISBN 0815772939, page 308
  9. ^ Lesley Pearl, Ex-West Bank `mayor' in Berkeley visit, says Jews must study Arab culture, Jewish news weekly of Northern California, November 24, 1995
  10. ^ Growing Doubts at Home Time Magazine, May 17, 1982
  11. ^ [2]"tufailahmad.com"
  12. ^ Richard Bonney False prophets: the 'clash of civilizations' and the global war on terror Peter Lang 2008 Pg 308
  13. ^ a b MEMRI About Us, Memri.org, accessed July 23, 2006
  14. ^ Memri.org Mission Statement, at web.archive.org, accessed July 2, 2001
  15. ^ a b c Middle East Media Research Institute at Political Research Associates
  16. ^ John Baron: Israeli Web site Debka.com at center of New York ‘dirty bomb’ tip The Jewish Journal, August 16, 2007. Accessed March 5, 2009.
  17. ^ The Islamist Websites Monitor No. 1, Memri.org, accessed January 28, 2006
  18. ^ Thanks for the MEMRI (.org) Jay Nordlinger, National Review, September 13, 2004, accessed July 23, 2006
  19. ^ Cursor, Inc. About Us cursor.org accessed Oct. 15 2007
  20. ^ MEMRI Media Transparency Profile, accessed Oct. 7 2007
  21. ^ Charity Navigator About Us charitynavigator.org accessed Oct. 15 2007
  22. ^ Charity Navigator, Charity Navigator Rating - The Middle East Media Research Institute
  23. ^ Charity Navigator, What Do Our Ratings Mean, accessed Oct. 8, 2007
  24. ^ http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2011/08/170397.htm
  25. ^ a b c d Laila Lalami, "Missionary Position," The Nation (19 June 2006) p. 32.
  26. ^ a b Leila Hudson, "The New Ivory Towers: Think Tanks, Strategic Studies and 'Counterrealism'," Middle East Policy 12:4 (Winter 2005) p. 130.
  27. ^ a b Debate on CNN
  28. ^ America’s Middle East foreign policy think tanks: What went wrong? Institute for Research Middle Eastern Policy
  29. ^ http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=48946
  30. ^ Bin Laden's Audio: Threat to States?, Professor Juan Cole Informed Comment blog, November 2, 2004 - accessed on 1/08/07
  31. ^ a b Perelman, Marc (7 December 2001). "No Longer Obscure, Memri Translates the Arab World". The Forward. http://web.archive.org/web/20011206222409/http://www.forward.com/issues/2001/01.12.07/news7.html. 
  32. ^ Richard H. Curtiss, "Meyrav Wurmser: the Neocons' Den Mother", Washington Report on Middle East Affairs 26.3 (April 2007) p17.
  33. ^ a b "Propaganda that widens the Arab-West divide - Gained in translation". Le Monde Diplomatique. October 2005. http://mondediplo.com/2005/10/15propaganda.  See in French (freely available) "Traduction ou trahison? Désinformation à l’israélienne.". Le Monde Diplomatique. October 2005. http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2005/09/EL_OIFI/12796#nb11.  (Persian translation also available for free here)
  34. ^ a b Mayor of London Press Release[dead link]
  35. ^ Rima Barakat, "MEMRI's systematic distortions," Rocky Mountain News (27 March 2006) p. 35A.
  36. ^ Fear, Inc. The Roots of the Islamophobia Network in America Center for American Progress August, 2011
  37. ^ a b c Whitaker, Brian (15 May 2007). "Arabic under fire". The Guardian. http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/brian_whitaker/2007/05/arabic_under_fire.html. Retrieved 2007-05-16. 
  38. ^ Yigal Carmon Osama Bin Laden Tape Threatens U.S. States memri.org, 1 November 2004
  39. ^ Ramona Smith, "Did Osama send election threat?," Philadelphia Daily News (2 November 2004).
  40. ^ TBS 13
  41. ^ a b Lawrence Swaim, MEMRI is 'propaganda machine' expert says, InFocus, June 7, 2007
  42. ^ Director of London's Al-Maqreze Centre for Historical Studies Hani Sibai: There are No 'Civilians' in Islamic Law; The Bombing is a Great Victory for Al-Qa'ida, Which ‘Rubbed the Noses of the World's 8 Most Powerful Countries in the Mud’, MEMRI, Special Dispatch No.932, July 12, 2005.
  43. ^ London-based radical salutes bombs 'victory' by Nick Fielding and Dipesh Gadher, The Sunday Times, July 17, 2005
  44. ^ Rebuttal of the lies and injustices that the Memri website and some of the British media spread about me مركز المقريزي للدراسات التاريخية Hani al-Sebai July 17, 2005
  45. ^ Meyrav Wurmser: The Neocons’ Den Mother Washington Report on Middle East Affairs
  46. ^ Désinformation à l’israélienne Le Monde diplomatique
  47. ^ Institute for Policy Studies
  48. ^ Halim Barakat The story of an article
  49. ^ a b Bigotry, Hate Speech from Scholars Must Be Exposed and Condemned Aviel Roshwald April 26, 2002
  50. ^ Majd Yaser Al-Mallah, Coeli Fitzpatrick Twentieth-century Arab writers Gale Cengage Learning, 2008 Pg 39 ISBN 0787681644
  51. ^ POLITICS-US: Pro-Israel Group's Money Trail Veers Hard Right (IPS, 21.10.2009)
  52. ^ Rosemary Church, Jim Clancy, Atika Shubert, Ben Wedeman, Neil Connery, John Vause, Eunice Yoon, Becky Anderson, Jill Dougherty, "Recruiting Next Generation of Militants: Mickey Mouse-Like Character Reaches Out to Palestinian Children," Your World Today (CNN Transcripts) aired 9 May 2007.
  53. ^ a b "Arabic under fire" by Brian Whitaker, Guardian.co.uk, 2007-05-15
  54. ^ a b "Paula Zahn Now" TV show transcript, CNN transcripts, aired 2007-05-08
  55. ^ John Lloyd, "Pay any price, bear any burden?," New Statesman (3 February 2003).
  56. ^ Friedman, Thomas L. "Giving the Hatemongers No Place to Hide." July 22, 2005. Retrieved on March 23, 2009.
  57. ^ a b c d Jay Nordlinger, Thanks for the MEMRI (.org) National Review May 6, 2002
  58. ^ September 11 And Arab Media: The Anti-Jewish And Anti-American Blame Game, Anti-Defamation League, Page 3-4.
  59. ^ The Nazi Slander by Duncan M. Currie, The Harvard Crimson, May 17, 2002.
  60. ^ What can Israel do in the Global Disorder? by Manfred Gerstenfeld, Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, No. 465 15 Heshvan 5762 / 1 November 2001.
  61. ^ Terror in America (18): Al-Azhar University Representative in the U.S. and Imam of New York's Islamic Center: The American Attack Against Afghanistan is Terrorism… This War Will be the End of America… If the Americans Knew That the Jews Carried Out the September 11 Attacks They Would Do to Them What Hitler did MEMRI.org, Special Dispatch No.288, October 19, 2001.

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