https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/430143
Holocaust scholar's book canceled after refusal to bash Israel
Dr. Rafael Medoff says publication of 'Cartoonists Against the Holocaust' was canceled after he rejected demands to include accusations against Israel and the US in the book's introduction
A planned book on American editorial cartoons from the Holocaust era was canceled after its author refused demands to include criticism of Israel and the United States in the introduction.
Dr. Rafael Medoff, author of "Cartoonists Against the Holocaust," said that a Dark Horse imprint editor sought to add language accusing Israel of war crimes and crimes against humanity and comparing prisons in the US to concentration camps.
Medoff rejected the proposed language, arguing that the claims were inaccurate and would inject contemporary political issues into a historical work.
“Accusing Israel of genocide is a lie, and requiring a Holocaust scholar to denounce Israel to see his book published is antisemitic bullying," Medoff said.
"Cartoonists Against the Holocaust" presents 150 editorial cartoons published in American newspapers during the 1930s and 1940s, accompanied by Medoff's commentary. The book is intended to illustrate what information was available to Americans about the Holocaust while it was taking place.
Dark Horse previously published two books by Medoff, "Whistleblowers" and "Cartoonists Against Racism."
In a September 202, the imprint editor proposed adding a separate note addressing Israel and the US. Medoff responded that references to “concentration camps" in the United States diminished the suffering of Jewish victims of Nazi concentration camps.
“There are no concentration camps in America, and it’s not a Nazi country," Medoff wrote. “Misusing the term ‘concentration camps’ diminishes the suffering that was experienced by the Jewish victims of the real concentration camps in the 1930s-1940s."
Medoff also accused the imprint editor of imposing a political test on the publication of his work.
“It’s troubling to see McCarthyism rearing its ugly head in 21st-century America. Historians should be free to write about history, without being subjected to political litmus tests," he said.
Gammill, Director of Legal Policy and Litigation at StandWithUs Saidoff Law, criticized the circumstances described by Medoff.
“When a comic book publisher pressures a Holocaust scholar to denounce the Jewish state before his own book on the Holocaust can see print, the irony is hard to miss," she said.
Medoff is the founding director of the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies in Washington, DC.
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https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/430187
The cancellation of Rafael Medoff’s book on Holocaust cartoons
The perils of politicizing Holocaust memory
In an era increasingly defined by ideological litmus tests and the coercive imposition of political orthodoxy, the abrupt cancellation of Dr. Rafael Medoff’s forthcoming volume, “Cartoonists Against the Holocaust," represents not merely a publishing dispute but a profound cultural rupture. As reported by The New York Post on Friday, the episode has ignited a fierce debate over intellectual independence, historical integrity, and the alarming encroachment of contemporary political agendas upon the sanctity of Holocaust scholarship.
At the center of the controversy stands Medoff, a preeminent historian and founding director of The David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies, whose scholarly contributions have long been regarded as both rigorous and morally lucid. His book, intended to chronicle the role of editorial cartoonists in exposing Nazi atrocities during the 1940s, was poised to offer a compelling examination of how visual satire served as a vehicle for truth during one of history’s darkest chapters. Yet, the project was ultimately derailed-not by questions of scholarship or merit-but by an insistence from editor Craig Yoe that the book’s introduction include denunciations of Israel and the United States.
According to Medoff, the demand was unequivocal: insert language accusing Israel of “war crimes" in Gaza and liken American immigration policies to “concentration-style prisons," or risk seeing the book shelved indefinitely. The historian’s response was equally resolute. “There are no concentration camps in America, and it’s not a Nazi country," Medoff wrote in a detailed rebuttal cited by The New York Post. “Misusing the term ‘concentration camps’ diminishes the suffering that was experienced by the Jewish victims of the real concentration camps in the 1930s-1940s."
This was not, by any reasonable measure, a controversial stance. It was, rather, a defense of historical accuracy and moral proportion-principles that ought to be sacrosanct in any serious engagement with the Holocaust. Yet Medoff’s refusal to accede to “factually inaccurate" and ideologically motivated insertions ultimately led to the book’s cancellation. “The book was canceled. I was canceled," he told The New York Post, encapsulating in a single sentence the broader phenomenon of cultural exclusion that has come to define much of the contemporary intellectual landscape.
The implications of this episode extend far beyond the confines of a single publishing house. They speak to a growing tendency to instrumentalize Holocaust memory for present-day political ends, a practice that risks not only distorting historical understanding but also eroding the moral authority of Holocaust scholarship itself. Medoff’s objection to the use of the term “genocide" in reference to Israel was particularly pointed. “Accusing Israel of genocide is a lie," he stated unequivocally, adding that “requiring a Holocaust scholar to denounce Israel to see his book published is antisemitic bullying."
Such language underscores a critical concern: the conflation of contemporary geopolitical disputes with the unparalleled horrors of the Holocaust. To equate modern state actions with the systematic extermination of millions of Jews is not merely analytically flawed; it is, as Medoff suggested, a diminishment of the very suffering that the Holocaust represents. The New York Post has consistently highlighted this tension, noting that the integrity of Holocaust discourse is imperiled when historical terminology is deployed recklessly or polemically.
Craig Yoe’s position, as reflected in his correspondence, reveals a markedly different perspective. In a September 1, 2025 email cited by The New York Post, Yoe wrote that he had “thought long and hard" about including a separate note in the book to critique both Israel and the United States. He asserted that the Trump administration was “attempting to create concentration camp-style prisons" and that Israel was led by a prime minister facing allegations of “war crimes and crimes against humanity." These claims, Medoff argued, were not only extraneous to the subject of the book but also demonstrably inaccurate.
The fundamental issue, therefore, is not one of editorial discretion but of intellectual coercion. By conditioning the publication of a Holocaust-focused work on the inclusion of politically charged and historically dubious assertions, Yoe effectively sought to subordinate scholarship to ideology. This is a precedent that should alarm anyone committed to the principles of academic freedom and editorial independence.
It is worth noting that Dark Horse, the publisher originally contracted to release the book, has denied that political considerations played a role in its decision to cancel the project. As The New York Post reported, the company’s legal counsel attributed the cancellation to “financial needs and some scheduling issues." Yet this explanation has done little to quell skepticism, particularly in light of the detailed account provided by Medoff and corroborated by the advocacy organization StandWithUs.
Carly Gammill, legal director of StandWithUs, articulated the broader significance of the episode in remarks cited by The New York Post: “When a comic book publisher pressures a Holocaust scholar to denounce the Jewish state before his own book on the Holocaust can see print, the irony is hard to miss." Indeed, the juxtaposition is as stark as it is troubling. A work intended to illuminate the historical struggle against antisemitism was itself subjected to conditions that are reflective of contemporary antisemitic pressures.
The cancellation of Medoff’s book is not an isolated incident. As The New York Post has observed, it forms part of a broader pattern in which Jewish artists, intellectuals, and public figures have faced professional repercussions in the aftermath of the October 7, 2023 Hamas attacks on Israel. The cases of comic book creator Miriam Libicki and filmmaker Nadav Lapid, both of whom encountered institutional resistance linked to their Israeli identity or pro-Israel positions, further illustrate this trend.
What distinguishes the Medoff case, however, is the explicit attempt to compel a Holocaust scholar to adopt a particular political stance as a condition of publication. This is not merely a matter of editorial preference; it is an intrusion into the domain of scholarly autonomy. The Holocaust, as a subject of study, demands a level of rigor and sensitivity that is incompatible with the imposition of extraneous ideological frameworks.
Medoff’s professional credentials lend additional weight to his position. As the founding director of a leading institute dedicated to Holocaust studies, he has devoted his career to preserving the historical record and combating distortion. His book, which includes 150 editorial cartoons-nine of which were originally published in The New York Post during the 1940s-was intended to shed light on how information about the Holocaust was disseminated in real time. To derail such a project on political grounds is, at best, a disservice to scholarship and, at worst, an act of cultural erasure.
The broader question that emerges from this controversy is whether the publishing industry is becoming increasingly inhospitable to viewpoints that deviate from prevailing ideological currents. If the price of publication is the adoption of specific political positions, then the marketplace of ideas is no longer a forum for open inquiry but a mechanism for enforcing conformity.
In defending his refusal to comply with Yoe’s demands, Medoff has articulated a principle that resonates far beyond this particular dispute: the integrity of historical scholarship must not be compromised by contemporary political pressures. His stance is not one of obstinacy but of fidelity-to facts, to history, and to the moral gravity of the Holocaust.
As The New York Post noted in its coverage, the stakes of this debate are considerable. The Holocaust is not merely a subject of academic study; it is a foundational element of modern moral consciousness. To politicize its memory is to risk trivializing its lessons.
In the final analysis, the cancellation of “Cartoonists Against the Holocaust" is emblematic of a broader cultural moment in which the boundaries between scholarship and ideology are increasingly contested. Medoff’s refusal to acquiesce to editorial demands that are both inaccurate and inappropriate constitutes an act of intellectual courage-one that deserves recognition and, indeed, emulation.
The line he drew is one that must be preserved.
Fern Sidman, a former NY correspondent for Arutz Sheva, is the current editor-in-chief of The Jewish Voice, a New York based publication. Her writings can be accessed at tjvnews.com
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