‘Umbrella Academy’ creator says antisemitism claim on Netflix show ‘incorrect’
Steve Blackman, who is Jewish, defended making the episodes after criticism form the Board of Deputies of British Jews
The co-creator of the Netflix superhero series “The Umbrella Academy” pushed back against criticism that the show features antisemitic stereotypes.
Based on a comic book series of the same name, the show includes an underground society of lizard people who secretly control the world and their handler — who speaks Yiddish in at least one scene.
“The accusation of antisemitism in ‘The Umbrella Academy’ is hurtful and, more importantly, factually incorrect,” Steve Blackman said in a statement. “I wrote these episodes, created the character, and am myself Jewish. While I understand audiences sometimes receive things in a different way than creators intend, The Handler was not created as an antisemitic character.
“The Handler speaks every language, including Swedish, Mandarin, Yiddish, and English as we saw this season, and The Commission is not an evil organisation; they do not control finances, governments, or the media. The only thing they control – and more importantly, protect – is the timeline of our fictional Umbrella Academy universe.”
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Critics, including on social media, have said that an organisation dedicated to controlling the world headed by someone who speaks Yiddish plays into antisemitic conspiracy theories.
The Board of Deputies published an open letter criticising the show following the first season.
“The use of a Yiddish saying by the evil boss of an organisation which controls the world’s timeline is clearly an antisemitic trope,” the group’s vice president, Amanda Bowman, told the Sun after the open letter was published. “Whether intentional or not, this makes for very uncomfortable viewing. Netflix should take action to remove the racism from this scene.”
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