Share Share On Facebook Tweet Share On Twitter Print Print Article Email Email This Article October 3, 2017 3:57 pm 1 New Film on Roger Waters Seeks to Expose BDS Frontman’s Antisemitism avatar by Adam Abrams / JNS.org Roger Waters. Photo: Jethro via Wikimedia Commons. JNS.org – Ahead of Roger Waters’ Canadian tour in October, B’nai Brith Canada and award-winning filmmaker Ian Halperin are planning to premiere a new film — Wish You Weren’t Here — exposing the anti-Israel rocker’s history of promoting antisemitism. Waters — who used to head the band Pink Floyd, and has compared the Israeli government to Nazi Germany and claimed that the “powerful Jewish lobby” runs the media — is arguably one of the most vocal figures behind the anti-Israel BDS movement. He is also the most prominent voice in pressuring other artists to boycott the Jewish state. Leading Jewish groups, such as the Anti-Defamation League and the Simon Wiesenthal Center, have noted that Waters repeatedly promotes conspiratorial antisemitic views, and exploits Jewish symbols to promote Jew-hatred. “What Roger Waters is doing is espousing hatred, vitriol and extreme prejudice against Israel and the Jewish people. … If he’d been doing this against any other race he’d be stopped,” Halperin, the film’s producer and a New York Times best-seller, told JNS.org. October 4, 2017 10:31 am 0 Har Adar Terror Attack Is a Reminder of Israel’s Fragile, Dynamic Security Landscape JNS.org - The recent terror attack that killed three Israelis in Har Adar is a reminder of the fragile security situation across Israel,... The film’s name is a wordplay on the title track of Pink Floyd’s 1975 album, Wish You Were Here. “Shame on corporate America for supporting this purveyor of hatred and antisemitism. Corporate America should be ashamed … and look in the mirror and realize that this is not 1938,” Halperin said. Halperin — the son of a Holocaust survivor — embarked on what he referred to as a “two-year odyssey,” traveling the world to produce the film. In addition to highlighting Waters’ many antisemitic and anti-Israel statements, Halperin’s movie also strives to expose the broader BDS movement as a wholly antisemitic campaign. “BDS activists seek to conflate legitimate criticism of Israel with the delegitimization of Israel in the international arena,” B’nai Brith Canada CEO Michael Mostyn said. “By exploiting the rhetoric of ‘human rights,’ ‘social justice’ and other universal moral principles, BDS activists portray Israel as inherently racist, thereby calling into question the very existence of the Jewish state, [and] seeking to cast it as a pariah among nations.” The initiative to screen the film was organized after B’nai Brith’s leadership learned — halfway through the editing process — that the movie features never-before-seen interviews with some of the world’s leading experts on antisemitism, such as Pope Francis, Alan Dershowitz, Natan Sharansky and Ronald Lauder. Wish You Weren’t Here also features interviews with artists and luminaries like Paul McCartney, Elton John and Tony Blair. “What motivated B’nai Brith to get involved [with screening Halperin’s film] is the chance to promote awareness that the BDS movement is inherently antisemitic, and that its supporters, like Roger Waters, strengthen the campaign that seeks Israel’s destruction,” said Mostyn. “Whatever definition of antisemitism you abide by … Roger Waters is most certainly guilty,” Mostyn said, adding that the Wish You Weren’t Here tour is B’nai Brith’s “protest against Waters,” and “our chance to educate the public that he is promoting hatred against the only democracy in the Middle East.” Wish You Weren’t Here premiered in Toronto on Monday. B’nai Brith is set to hold screenings of the film in Canadian cities on the same nights as Waters’s performances in those cities — Quebec City (Oct. 8), Ottawa (Oct. 10), Montreal (Oct. 16), Winnipeg (Oct. 22) and Edmonton (Oct. 25) — “in order to counter his inflammatory rhetoric against Israel and the Jewish people,” said Mostyn. The film will also be screened in US cities and in Israel following its Canadian debut. “It starts with Roger Waters, but it’s all about contemporary antisemitism, which is thriving, and the world is turning a blind eye,” Halperin said. “There’s no place for this in today’s world. … It’s time to call a spade a spade.”