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TAKING
A JAB AT GANDHI
(23 January 2003)
by Brian Willoughby from tolerance.org. Reprinted
with permisssion from alternet.org.
The
February 2003 edition of Maxim magazine, in an alleged "humor"
article headlined "Maxim's Kick-Ass Workout," depicts
a strapping man in a muscle T-shirt beating up an image of Mahatma
Gandhi. The article, attempting to show how fighting can bring fitness,
calls for "a healthy regimen of violent assaults" and
urges readers to "teach those pacifists a lesson about aggression."
The three-page article includes 21 different scenes of the man hitting,
kicking, choking and throwing Gandhi, who is named in the text,
where the reader is urged to "ask Gandhi if he can see a change
in your physique."
PROTESTERS
SEEKING CHANGE IN MAXIM'S ATTITUDE
"My
first reaction is, 'How stupid.' My next reaction is, 'How sad,'"
said Michelle Naef, administrator of the M.K. Gandhi Institute in
Memphis, Tennesee. "How sad it is that they don't understand
how special a person he was."
GANDHI
WAS SPECIAL AND INCREDIBLY STRONG
"Mahatma
Gandhi spent his life fasting and being tortured," she said.
"Clearly, they have no clue who they're dealing with, to depict
him this way." The article and illustrations, Naef added, are
"the stupidest thing I've ever seen."
"It's
promoting hate crimes. In today's context, after Sept. 11 and with
the anti-war movement, this article is telling people to beat the
crap out of Asians and pacifists," said Michael Matsuda, chairperson
of the Orange County Asian Pacific Islander Community Alliance in
Garden Grove, California.
Naef
and the OCAPICA are seeking a formal apology from Maxim. OCAPICA
also is calling for Maxim to donate funds toward tolerance education
to, in Matsuda's words, "show that they're truly contrite."
In
a "Total Wimp Workout" sidebar to the main story, Maxim
depicts the Gandhi look-alike huddling in a closet, arms wrapped
around his knees, head bowed. The accompanying text encourages "wimps"
to "tighten your arms around your legs like the time your mommy
tried to take away Malibu Ken" and to "cry like a kid
enjoying his first rectal thermometer."
"There
is a deep and fundamental misunderstanding of what nonviolence is
all about," Naef said. "Gandhi was an incredibly strong
person. Muscle strength can't possibly come close to the kind of
strength Mahatma Gandhi had."
As
Gandhi himself said, "A person who has realized the principle
of nonviolence has the God-given strength for his weapon, and the
world has not yet known anything that can match it."
MAGAZINE
PREVIOUSLY RIDICULED GANDHI
Maxim
magazine's Web site introduces the article with somewhat innocent
sounding words. Under the headline, "Two-Fisting: Let's Get
Physical," the promo reads, "Beating people up is more
than just a day's work. If you do it right, it can be an awesome
fitness regimen. Knuckle up." Illustrations
found in the print magazine are not present on the Web site.
However,
the Maxim Web site does include a "Stupid Fun" article
in its archives headlined, "Oh, Calcutta: Three Reasons to
Hate ... Gandhi." That article, which claims Gandhi was a "lousy
husband," a "rotten father" and a "poor role
model," was published in November 2000.
Ironically,
just two months ago, Maxim launched its first Asian edition, in
Korea -- just in time, Naef said, for the magazine to make fun of
"one of the most revered men on the Asian continent."
The
magazine was named Adweek's "Hottest Magazine of the Year"
in 2002 and Advertising Age's "Magazine of the Year."
Maxim,
which promotes itself as "the largest-selling men's lifestyle
publication in the world," is edgy and known as much for its
images of scantily clad women as for pushing the limits of good
taste. The joke-of-the-day earlier this week, for example, involved
two nuns discussing condoms found in a priest's room. While
such offensive material isn't unexpected in Maxim, protesters say
that doesn't make it acceptable.
Gandhi
fasted more than 30 times in his life, protesting such issues as
low wages earned by mill workers and promoting such things as Hindu-Muslim
unity. Mohandas Karamchand "Mahatma" Gandhi was assassinated
on Jan. 30, 1948, on his way to evening prayers. Such
a life, protesters say, should not become the punching bag for sophomoric
humor. "It's
fanning the flames of hatred and bigotry," said Matsuda, of
the OCAPICA group in Southern California. "That should be offensive
to everyone."
MAXIM
ISSUES AN APOLOGY
Citing
a situation that is "spiraling down" and the need to move
up the timetable, Maxim magazines editor-in-chief Keith
Blanchard, working through the magazines PR firm, issued this
statement on January 30th:
"We
apologize if our cartoon depicting Mahatma Gandhi in the February
2003 issue of Maxim was interpreted as offensive. An edgy sense
of humor, laced with irony, has always been a central element of
Maxim's editorial. For some people, this piece may have gone one
step too far. We at Maxim do, in fact, believe in Gandhi's teachings
of peace. In fact, we chose Gandhi as the subject of our workout
cartoon specifically because he is the least likely target of aggression
imaginable. No offense was intended to anyone."
Maxim's
statement hasn't completely quelled the storm.
"I
have my doubts about the sincerity of such an apology," said
Michelle Naef of the M.K. Gandhi Institute in Memphis, Tennesee.
"If the people at Maxim actually 'believe in Gandhi's teachings
of peace,' they would never have considered publishing such an article
in the first place." Naef
said she would continue her "wait and see" stance to see
what Maxim prints in future editions.
WANT
TO PROTEST?
Let
Maxim magazine know how you feel about the offensive article. Click
here to vist the Maxim website and post your comments to them
directly.
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