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Opinion

Why is the Guardian shocked that terrorists are portrayed as monsters?

The paper’s review of October 7 documentary One Day in October is amoral in criticising the film for sympathising with the massacre victims

October 10, 2024 10:12
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Emily Hand and her father Tom Hand for the Channel 4 documentary One Day in October. (Photo: Channel 4)
3 min read

Don’t you just hate how Osama bin Laden is portrayed by the mainstream media? A man with a fully thought through programme for government, he is nonetheless demonised as some sort of mass murderer. And as for Hitler: all he was really doing was standing up for Germany after it was so badly treated at Versailles. Sadly, he is portrayed only as some sort of madman.

I haven’t encountered the work of the Guardian’s Stuart Jeffries before, but on the basis of his review of Channel 4’s superb documentary, One Day in October, I’ll make a stab at his view of Osama and Adolf. Misunderstood – or, rather, not properly understood. Caricatured as villains when in reality they are so much more complex.

Jeffries has had the misfortune to have had to watch and review One Day in October for the Guardian. Misfortune for us, that is, because his review has now been published. I would ordinarily have recommended you give it a miss – the review, not the documentary – because it is in many ways no more than the usual boilerplate Guardian drivel and it will just anger you.

But perhaps this time you might actually want to have a read of the review, because it is something quite special - even for the Guardian, which infamously ran a column by Osama bin Laden at the height of Al Qaeda’s success as a terrorist organisation.