“No culture puts shoes on the table,” a Japanese diplomat told Yediot. “What precisely was this illustrious chef Segev thinking?
一位日本外交官对《新消息报》表示:“没有哪国文化把鞋放在餐桌上,这位大名鼎鼎的塞格夫主厨到底是怎么想的?”
“If this is meant to be humor, we do not find it funny. I can tell you that we are offended for our prime minister,” the diplomat said.
这位外交官称:“如果这是一种幽默,我们并不觉得有趣。我可以告诉你,我们因为首相的遭遇感到被冒犯了。”
Israel’s Foreign Ministry said it was not involved in approving the dishes for the meal.
以色列外交部表示,他们并没有审批宴会的菜单。
“We respect and appreciate the chef. He is very creative,” the ministry said in an initial statement. After this report was published, the ministry amended its statement to add: “We have the utmost respect for the Japanese prime minister.”
以色列外交部的最初声明称:“我们尊重并欣赏塞格夫主厨,他非常有创意。”《新消息报》报道此事后,外交部修改了声明,补充道:“我们对日本首相致以最高的尊重。”
“The dessert was served inside a sculpture by international artist Tom Dixon, whose works are displayed in major museums around the world and for the first time was displayed in Israel at a meal. This is a high-quality piece of art made of cast metal in the shape of a shoe; it is not a real shoe,” Segev's publicist said in a statement, according to Yediot Aharonot.
【以色列总理宴请安倍,却端上来一只“鞋”,日本人怒了!】相关文章:
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