Anti-Semitism and Holocaust

Arab Anti-Semitism and the Arab-Israeli Conflict

By Abraham H. Foxman - July, 30 2001
For many years anti-Semitism in the Arab world was seen as a marginal issue. Manifestations of Jew hatred were attributed to the ongoing resentments stemming from the hostilities between Israel and the Arabs rather than to any deep-seated prejudice. It was repeatedly pointed out that Jews living under Islam through the centuries experienced far more tolerance than Jews in Christian Europe.

Those who wanted to make something of the issue - calling the Arabs fundamentally anti-Semitic - were dismissed as individuals who were looking for any reason to avoid moving forward a peace process that would necessitate concessions.

Now that we are simultaneously witnessing the unraveling of hopes for peace and a spurt of Arab anti-Semitism, it forces us to take another look at the connection between anti-Semitism and the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Is anti-Semitism a more deeply ingrained phenomenon in the Arab world than we have been willing to acknowledge and, if so, what does it say about future Arab-Israeli relations? Is current anti-Semitism in the Middle East linked to historic Muslim attitudes toward Jews? Even if anti-Semitism were more deeply ingrained in the Arab world, is peace still a possibility?

A look at the evolution of the Holocaust as a theme of Arab propaganda gives an insight to this subject. Until recently, the Arabs argued shrewdly, though falsely, in their reading of history, maintaining that they should not be paying the price for the murder of six million Jews by Europeans.

Ignoring the real Jewish connection to the land of Israel, this argument had a certain resonance in that it acknowledged the horror of the Holocaust but depicted the Palestinians as innocent victims of a European guilt that needed to be atoned for by granting the Jews a state. Now, however, there is a shift in their Holocaust denial and revisionism, by asserting that the Jews have concocted or exaggerated what happened during World War II in order to dupe the world into accepting the illegitimate Jewish state in Palestine.

This change in emphasis suggests that the issue is not primarily that of the depth of anti-Semitism but of the reduction of inhibitions about expressing such extreme forms of hatred. The Palestinians no longer merely have to talk about their suffering as a consequence of Jewish suffering, when they can get away with accusing the Jews of being the perpetrators of a fraud.

What this tells us is that it is vitally important for nations and leaders around the world to take seriously these manifestations of hatred and denounce them. The US and the European Union must not allow Yasser Arafat, Hosni Mubarak, or other leaders in the Arab world to think that they can tolerate or encourage anti-Semitism in their societies with impunity.

It is hard enough to overcome the political and nationalistic problems that stand in the way of Palestinian-Israeli peace. The spreading anti-Semitic incitement - blood-libel charges, conspiracy theories, comparing Israel to Hitler - will only embitter the peoples on both sides and make good-faith peace negotiations an even more distant dream.

Moreover, whether or not this surge of anti-Semitic rhetoric is deeply rooted, it is clear that this kind of barrage, if continued over time, will poison the minds of many in the Arab world so that anti-Semitism will indeed become a way of life as never before. The prospects this development would hold for greater violence against Jews, not only in the Middle East but also around the world, are too terrible to contemplate.

Several months ago I said that we must be as firm in denouncing Arab anti-Semitism as any other kind of anti-Semitism. Today, I go a step further. Arab anti-Semisim, if allowed to flourish, could become one of the most destructive forces unleashed in this new century. History has shown us where anti-Semitism can lead. Combating it right now must not be the task only of Israel and organizations like the Anti-Defamation League. For the sake of peace and a sane world, responsible governments everywhere must start to speak up.

(The writer is national director of the Anti-Defamation League.)

©2001 - Jerusalem Post

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