Carlos Latuff
Carlos Latuff (born November 30, 1968), in São Cristovo (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), is a Brazilian political cartoonist of Lebanese origins who works independently. His works are concerned with a wide range of themes, including anti-globalization, anti-capitalism, and anti-Americanism and anti-military intervention. Furthermore, the issue for which he is most famous are his photographs depicting the Arab-Israeli conflict. Lattouf described his work as controversial.[1]
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Cartoon by Carlos Latuff in support of Saudi women driving cars and in support of the women's demonstrations campaign in 2011.

Black Liberation and Racism, artwork by Carlos Latuff
Carlos Latuff | |
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Born | 30 November 1968 |
Died |

Artwork
Some of Carlos Latuff's controversial artwork.
- Palestinian Intifada
- Neo-Nazi caricature
- Riots in Greece in 2008
- Che Guevara depicted as a Jew
- Nelson Mandela as a Palestinian in Israeli prisons.
- Shared human coexistence: a Jewish boy and a Muslim girl with disabilities.
- The war for oil
- Egyptian Muslims and Christians are one hand.
- The emergence of the Iraqi resistance.
- Memory of the Holocaust and its comparison with reality in Palestine
- Anti-Semitism has become a peg for the survival of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank
- Comparing the Nazis to the Israelis
- America, the Great Satan
Related pages
References
- ""ناجي العلي" البرازيلي ومشكلته مع معجبين برسومه الكاريكاتورية من العرب". قناة العربية (in العربية). قناة العربية. 30 نوفمبر 2011. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
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