The now deleted cartoon published July 3 on The Anderson County Review’s Facebook page, criticized Kansas Governor Laura Kelly’s recent COVID-19 mask order. Kelly was depicted in a mask with a large Star of David on it, against the backdrop of a Holocaust train. Below the image read “Lockdown Laura says: Put on your mask ... and step onto the cattle car.”
The train depicted in the cartoon is reminiscent of the train that Rabbi Zalman Tiechtel’s great-grandfather was murdered on. His grandfather, a child at the time, spent World War II running from one hiding place to another. “For any Jewish person it’s a shocking image to see, but especially if your own family is connected to the Holocaust… seeing that imagery of such a painful moment in our history, in our past, used in any context is disrespectful,” Rabbi Tiechtel of the University of Kansas Chabad, told The Chronicle.
Rabbi Tiechtel feels that comparisons like this diminish the pain and suffering that the Jewish people went through. “There’s absolutely no justification for that kind of parallel,” he said.
Anderson County is a little over an hour southwest of Kansas City.
The owner of the paper and creator of the cartoon, Dane Hicks, is the chairman of the Anderson County Republican Party. He initially refused to back down or apologize, emailing an Associated Press reporter that, “Political editorial cartoons are gross over-caricatures designed to provoke debate and response — that’s why newspapers publish them — fodder or the marketplace of ideas. The topic here is the governmental overreach which has been the hallmark of Governor Kelly’s administration.”
Rabbi Mark Levin, founding rabbi of Congregation Beth Torah, told The Chronicle, “The message is government control and that comparison is literally obscene. This person… is making a crude attempt to call Laura Kelly a Nazi. Now there’s no doubt that fascists control their constituents’ behavior. But they don’t do it in order to save their lives, they do it in order to kill them.”
In his initial message to the AP, Hicks noted that he would apologize to Holocaust survivors, their families or Jews “who take offense to the image… But then again they better than anyone should appreciate the harbingers of governmental overreach and the present but tender seedlings of tyranny.”
After criticism poured in from across the country over the weekend, Hicks decided not to include the cartoon as planned in his independent weekly newspaper’s Tuesday publication.
Hicks declined to answer specific questions from The Chronicle, but emailed Sunday, “Well I’ve had a pretty educational evening and morning discussing the cartoon with some leaders and members of your faith who were very illustrative, very direct, yet very understanding. It’s clear in trying to make my point about the mess in Kansas government I tread on real hurt.