Images of Israel's premier elbowing his way to the front row of world leaders in Paris sparked both embarrassment and amusement back home.
A welter of headlines and columns were prompted by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's pushing to the front of Sunday's march in Paris and unsuccessfully trying to jump to the head of a queue waiting for a bus.
Many joked that such "pushiness" is a quintessentially Israeli trait, but Netanyahu has still faced a storm of criticism for his behaviour, with some alleging he was trying to make political hay for the general election due in March.
"We would expect the prime minister to represent us with dignity and not to disgrace us," wrote Shimon Shiffer in the top-selling Yediot Aharonot newspaper.
"I was embarrassed to see the Israeli leader push his way to the first bus of the leaders, and then elbow himself into the front row of state leaders," he wrote.
World leaders join several million marching in solidarity in Paris on Sunday after Islamic extremists killed 17 people in attacks targeting satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo and a kosher supermarket.
One of the enduring images from the march was Netanyahu and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas walking in the front row on either side of President Francois Hollande.
Israeli media have reported that France asked Netanyahu to stay away from the march, but he ignored the request and attended anyway.
After joining others at Hollande's Elysee Palace, Netanyahu tried to edge his way into the first bus taking officials to the starting point of the march but failed.
Once he was at the march, Netanyahu deftly manoeuvred his way from the second row to the first by way of a friendly handshake with Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita - whose country does not have diplomatic relations with Israel.
"It was embarrassing, not to mention disgraceful, to see Israel's prime minister... trying to push his way onto a bus that he was not supposed to board, making his way determinedly from the second row to the row of leaders walking in front," said Ben Caspit of the Maariv daily.
Left-leaning daily Haaretz even compared the prime ministry to an unruly tourist.
"Just as you can sometimes identify Israeli tourists abroad by their loud voices, poor manners and gauche behaviour, none of the hundreds of millions of people around the world who watched Sunday's Paris rally on television had any problem locating Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu," Yossi Verter of Haaretz wrote.
Members of the youth wing of the opposition Labour party even created an online game using Netanyahu's nickname called "Push the Bibi" - in which players have 30 seconds to manoeuvre the Israeli leader from the back of the crowd to the front.
At the end of the game a message reads: "When Bibi wins, everyone else loses. We need a different leadership that will put Israel in the front row, without pushing."
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