Immortal Hulk Artist Accused of Anti-Semitic Imagery | CBR

CONTENT WARNING: This piece features comic book panels containing apparent anti-Semitic imagery.

Artist Joe Bennett is being accused of putting anti-Semitic imagery into Immortal Hulk #43, which hit stores this week.

The issue features the Grey Hulk, Joe Fixit, in control of Bruce Banner's body. Fixit-as-Banner is a con artist grifting his way through New York City, who finds himself unable to avoid stepping into a fight when he sees a Black teen being assaulted by police officers. During one of his scams, Joe-as-Banner buys some jewelry with a stolen credit card to pawn it later. In the panel where he purchases the jewelry, we see that the name of the store (written in reverse as it's seen through the window) is Cronemberg's Jewelry, except that instead of "Jewelry," the L is omitted and it says "Jewer" (presumably "Jewery," but the Y is blocked out), along with the Star of David, a well-known Jewish symbol, in the display.

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This panel evokes another Marvel controversy involving anti-Semitism from 2017, when artist Ardiaf Syaf featured a number of hidden references in X-Men Gold #1 to the November 2016 Jakarta protests against Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, the Chinese Christian Governor of Jakarta. Purnama drew controversy after suggesting that his political opponents were trying to discourage citizens from voting for him by citing Verse 51 of the fifth chapter of the Quran out of context. That verse was commonly translated into Indoneisan as, "Muslims should not appoint the Jews and Christians as their leader."

Syaf then included numerous references to the verse, which is also identified as Quran Surah 5:51 or QS 5:51. Syaf had Colossus of the X-Men wear a shirt with QS 5:51 on it.

One notable similarity between Syaf's hidden messages and this week's Immortal Hulk is that Syaf had the Jewish leader of the X-Men, Kitty Pryde, posed next to a sign for "Jewelry," with the sign partially obscured to highlight the first few letters, as shown below.

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This is not the first time that the Immortal Hulk artist, a longtime comic book artist from Brazil who has been working in mainstream comics, primarily for Marvel, since 1994, has drawn controversy for his views. In 2019, when gay journalist Glenn Greenwald was assaulted by a far-right journalist, Bennett said that Greenwald should have been punched rather than slapped. Bennett apologized and deleted his comment.

Last year, when Bennett posted a drawing of She-Hulk on his Instagram, a fan replied, "Oh look, it's Hulk's angry transgender son," to which Bennett responded with laughing emojis.

CBR has reached out to Marvel for a comment but has not yet received a response.

KEEP READING: Marvel Fired an Artist Over Hidden Messages in a Comic – in 2001

Source: Twitter


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