Culture

Reporter Retracts Claims Van Jones Apologized For Black Community’s ‘Silence’ To Ye’s Hitler Comments






Van Jones in 2019 (Photo: Paras Griffin/Getty Images)


A Jewish reporter took to Twitter to retract claims he made several days ago that CNN commentator Van Jones apologized to the Jewish community for the Black community being silent in response to Ye’s troubling Hitler comments.

Jones was the keynote speaker earlier this week for a dinner in New York City presented by the United Jewish Appeal Federation of New York. A controversy ensued when Jacob Kornbluh, a senior political reporter for the Jewish publication The Forward, posted that Jones had apologized for the “silence of” the Black community for not admonishing the rhetoric that Ye had displayed in a recent interview.

On the right-wing program Infowars, Ye said he loved Hitler and that the Jewish community should forgive the racist German leader for his atrocities against Jewish people in Germany.

He posted a photo of Jones’ speech on Twitter.

“Keynoting the @UJAfedNY Wall St dinner, @VanJones68 apologizes to the Jewish community “for the silence of my community” allowing “an African American icon praising Hitler and Nazis, and we act like we don’t know where that hatred came from.” But he says “the silence is over.”

Two days after posting the message above, Kornbluh walked back his initial statement in a follow-up Tweet.

“CLARIFICATION:

did not apologize for alleged Black silence about Kanye. To the contrary: he stressed that many in his community are speaking out forcefully. In speech, he said he was sorry that he + others didn’t do more before Kanye. Apologies for any confusion.





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