THINK-ISRAEL


BIGOTRY, REVISIONISM AND BARONESS WARSI

by Melanie Phillips

The co-chairman of Britain's Conservative Party, Sayeeda Warsi, has delivered a speech[1] about antisemitism to the European Institute for the Study of Antisemitism. I am sure that Baroness Warsi means well. I am sure that she is personally genuinely opposed to bigotry and prejudice in any form. I would therefore like to be able to say it was a fine speech. I cannot do so. Despite much in it that was worthy and unexceptionable, in one vital respect it was a travesty - made no more palatable by the fact that many Jews subscribe to precisely the same lethally misguided misapprehension.

baroness.warsi
Baroness Warsi at the Conservative Party Conference in Birmingham, October 3, 2010 (Toby Melville)

This revolves around the comforting but mistaken notion that Jews and Muslims stand shoulder to shoulder against the same threat by racists and bigots. It's the argument that says 'antisemitism = Islamophobia'. And it's the claim that there is nothing intrinsically threatening to Jews within Islam.

All three notions are false. All three notions are promoted by many Jews All three were to be found in Baroness Warsi's speech. She said:

'The ugly strain of anti-Semitism found in some parts of the Muslim community arose in the late 20th century. The point is that there's nothing in our history which suggests that hatred between Muslim and Jews is inevitable.'

This is total rubbish. Muslim persecution of the Jews started in the 7th century with the birth of Islam and has continued ever since. It is true that down through the decades persecution of the Jews by Christians was more savage and barbaric than by Muslims. It is also true that there were periods when Jews prospered under Muslim rule. But the so-called 'golden age' for Jews in Muslim lands was very short indeed. The true history is a story of humiliation, persecution and pogroms.

The great medieval Jewish philosopher Moses Maimonides, no less, was forced to flee his native Cordoba in Spain after it was conquered in 1148 by the Muslim Almohads, who gave the Jews a choice of conversion, death or exile. In his Epistle to the Jews of Yemen written in about 1172, Maimonides wrote of the news of compulsory conversion for the Jews in Yemen having 'broken our backs' and 'astounded and dumbfounded the whole of our community'. The Arabs, he said, had 'persecuted us severely and passed baneful and discriminatory legislation against us'. 'Never did a nation molest, degrade, debase and hate us as much as they...'

Is there really 'nothing which suggests that hatred between Muslim and Jews is inevitable'? This is what I wrote in my book, The World Turned Upside Down:

'The Qur'an says Islam came before Judaism and Christianity, and was the faith practised by Abraham who was a Muslim. (3:67-68). It refers to Islam as the religion of Abraham many times (2:130, 135; 3:95; 4:125; 6:161.) It teaches that Jews and Christians corrupted their Scriptures so Allah sent a fresh revelation through Mohammed. This cancelled out Judaism and Christianity and brought people back to the one true religion of Islam that Abraham had practised.

'After the Jews rejected Mohammed, the Qur'an says the Jews were cursed by Allah (5:78) who transformed them into monkeys and pigs as punishment (2:65, 5:60, 7:166). It accuses the Jews of corrupting their holy books and removing the parts that spoke of Mohammed (2:75, cf verses 76-79, 5:13). It says the Jews were the greatest enemies of Islam (5:82), that both they and the Christians want Muslims to convert (2:120), that the Jews start wars and cause trouble throughout the earth (5:64, cf verse 67) and even that they claim to have killed the Messiah (4:157).

'As the historian of religion Professor Paul Merkley observes, the Qur'an declares that the whole of Jewish scripture from Genesis 15 onwards is full of lies...When the Jews refused to accept Islam, Mohammed denounced them as not people of faith. The outcome was the eradication of the Jewish-Arab tribe called the Banu Qurayza. Unable at first to break them, Mohammed entered into a truce with them which he broke, following which he slaughtered the entire Jewish population. Unlike the wars between tribes in the Hebrew Bible which remain merely a historical account with no practical application today, the eradication of the Banu Qurayza is constantly alluded to by the Islamists, for whom it remains an exemplary and timeless call to arms against precisely the same enemy and with similar tactics.'

Baroness Warsi said that Jews were currently targeted by the far left and the far right. So they are. But she omitted to say that they are also targeted by Muslims well beyond the groups she singled out -- Muslims Against Crusades, Islam 4 UK and Al Muhajiroun. Obliquely, she refers to Muslim Judeophobes as

'...religious fanatics. The people who claim faith drives them to acts of hatred...but who in reality are nothing more than bigots, who hijack their faith to justify their acts.'

But Muslim hatred of Jews, as Andrew Bostom notes most recently here,[2] is rooted in mainstream Koranic exegesis (someone should give Baroness Warsi for her birthday a copy of Bostom's monumental The Legacy of Islamic Antisemitism, more than 600 pages of meticulously documented Islamic Jew-hatred in both the religion and its history). 'Nothing which suggests that hatred between Muslim and Jews is inevitable'? The late Sheikh Tantawi, the Grand Mufti of Al Azhar University in Cairo and the most prominent and influential cleric in the Sunni Muslim world, used passages from the Koran to depict Jews as enemies of God, his prophets and of Islam itself. As the US media monitoring group CAMERA has noted,[3] Tantawi wrote:

'Qur'an describes people of the Book in general terms, with negative attributes like their fanaticism in religion, following a false path. It describes the Jews with their own particular degenerate characteristics, i.e., killing the prophets of God, corrupting his words by putting them in the wrong places, consuming the people's wealth frivolously, refusal to distance themselves from the evil they do, and other ugly characteristics caused by their [...] deep rooted lasciviousness.

'Later, after quoting some from the Koran, Tantawi writes "This means that not all Jews are not the same. The good ones become Muslims; the bad ones do not." (Legacy, page 394).

'Matthias Küntzel, author of Jihad and Jew Hatred: Islamism and the Roots of 9/11,[4] provides some other detail about Tantawi He writes that "Tantawi, the highest Sunni Muslim theologian, quotes Hitler's remark in Mein Kampf that "in resisting the Jew, I am doing the work of the Lord." Küntzel continues: "He praises The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, noting without the slightest trace of sympathy that "after the publication of the Protocols in Russia, some 10,000 Jews were killed."

'Tantawi made a number of other troubling statements. For example, in 2002, Tantawi declared[5] that Jews are "the enemies of Allah, descendents of apes and pigs." The following year, Tantawi issued an edict declaring that Jews should no longer be described in such a manner, apparently under pressure from the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

'While Tantawi did condemn the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001 he later affirmed terrorism against Israelis. In 2002, the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), reported[6] that Tantawi "declared that martyrdom (suicide) operations and the killing of civilians are permitted acts and that more such attacks should be carried out. Tantawi's positions were posted on
http://www.lailatalqadr.com/,[7] a website associated with Al Azhar.

To repeat - Sheikh Tantawi was the most prominent religious authority in Sunni Islam. Does Baroness Warsi class him also as a bigot who hijacked Islam to justify his hatred?

Jews cannot stand shoulder to shoulder with Muslims against attacks by bigots because a disproportionate number of Muslims reportedly harbour or even act upon prejudice against Jews. Reports by the Community Security Trust over the years persistently suggest that, while most attacks on Jews are carried out by white people, between a quarter and a third of such attacks where the perpetrators' appearance has been noted are carried out by people described as Asians or Arabs. Opinion polls have also shown that nearly two-fifths of Britain's Muslims believe that the Jewish community in Britain is a legitimate target 'as part of the ongoing struggle for justice in the Middle East'; that more than half believe that British Jews have 'too much influence over the direction of UK foreign policy'; and that some 46 percent think that the Jewish community is 'in league with Freemasons to control the media and politics.'

There are Muslims who truly abhor this hatred of Jews amongst their community -- groups like Muslims for Israel, for example, who are true fighters against bigotry, and truly brave. But in order genuinely to condemn something, you have to call it out for what it is - as do Muslims for Israel -- openly and honestly. Those who condemn anti-Jewish hatred while refusing properly to identify its perpetrators are not in the business of fighting bigotry. They are doing something quite different - to put it at its most charitable, trying to build bridges between communities in order to defeat hatred.

Of course, such bridge-building is in itself a noble aim. But if in the cause of building bridges between one community and another such people deny or sanitise the hatred of one of those communities for the other, they will inevitably, if inadvertently, end up strengthening that hatred - especially if at the same time they damn those who do tell the truth about this as bigots whose voices must therefore be silenced.

Which is what, believe it or not, elements within the Jewish community are shamefully doing. And which is why it is perhaps not so surprising that Baroness Warsi is, shall we say, a trifle confused.

Footnotes

[1] http://www.conservatives.com/News/ Speeches/2011/11/Warsi_Faith_is_a_force_for_good _in_our_country.aspx?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm _medium=twitter

[2] http://www.andrewbostom.org/blog/ 2011/10/20/understanding-hamas%E2%80%99s- mainstream-koranic-jew-hatred/

[3] http://www.camera.org/index.asp? x_context=7&x_issue=11&x_article=2137

[4] http://www.camera.org/siteadmin/ Innova3/scripts/Jihad%20and%20Jew%20 Hatred:%20Islamism%20and%20the%20 Roots%20of%209/11

[5] http://www.memri.org/report/en/ print754.htm

[6] http://www.memri.org/report/ en/0/0/0/0/0/125/641.htm

[7] http://www.lailatalqadr.com/


 

Melanie Phillips is a British journalist and author of Londonistan, an early book on the take over of British by Islam. Her latest book, The World Turned Upside Down: the Global Battle over God, Truth and Power, was published by Encounter in April 2010.

This article was published January 20, 2011 in Daily Mail It is available at
http://melaniephillips.com/bigotry-revisionism-and-baroness-warsi



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