AP's Caption Challenged Photographer
Remember Bernat Armangue, the AP photographer whose erroneous photo caption wrongly stated that a Palestinian protestor passed out, even though he was holding his hand up in the air? (CAMERA staff prompted a correction.)
Once again, Bernat Armangue is caption challenged. Consider the following photo and caption:
Here are the problems with this caption, starting with the fundamental falsehood followed by two secondary points:
1) This caption gives the misimpression that the man is actually standing in front of the mosque, on the Temple Mount. Given the tensions surrounding the Temple Mount in recent weeks, the presence of an ultra-Orthodox Jewish man standing in front of the mosque could be enough to set off additional Arab rioting, both on the mount and in nearby eastern Jerusalem neighborhoods.
In reality, he is apparently standing at the top of the steps that lead down to the Western Wall. He is resting his left arm on something, most likely the wall at the overlook at the top of those steps. From where he stands, he is separated from the Temple Mount by the Western Wall plaza. Especially in light of the sensitivity of the site, there is a huge difference between an ultra-Orthodox man standing on the entrance steps to the Western Wall, an area next to the Temple Mount and completely under Israeli control, versus an ultra-Orthodox man standing in front of the Al-Aqsa Mosque, on the Temple Mount itself, which is under the day-to-day control of the Islamic Waqf.
This would not be the first time that an AP photo caption has incorrectly placed a scene on the Temple Mount.
2) Why refer to the Temple Mount as the third holiest site in Islam and not point out that it is the holiest in Judaism?
3) The Al-Aqsa Mosque is not known by Jews to be the Temple Mount, it is known to Jews to be on the Temple Mount.
AP corrected photo captions in September 2000 and May 2009. We await a November 2009 correction as well.
(Hat tip to Yisrael Medad, who noticed this photo on BBC's Web site).
Love of the Land: AP's Caption Challenged Photographer
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