June 22, 2021
Time to expose Muslim anti-Semitism—the primary cause of rising
Jew-hatred
Dear Friend of FLAME: With anti-Semitism at record highs in the U.S. and around the world, many
prefer to focus purely on right-wing and neo-Nazi hatred against Jews,
rather than on the larger problem: Hatred of Jews and the Jewish
state in the Arab and Muslim world, home to a population of hundreds of
millions.
Unfortunately for the truth, the intersectionalist left is quick to oppose
factual evidence of widespread Muslim anti-Semitism, using accusations of
Islamophobia. Indeed, many on the left dismiss racism on the part of
“oppressed people of color” as an impossibility—a
philosophical contradiction.
Yet the increase in anti-Semitic attacks against Jews
worldwide—especially those associated with attacks against Israel and
its supporters—is disproportionately driven by Muslims.
Hate crimes against Jews in the U.S. spiked to 222 during the two-weeks of
fighting in May between Hamas and Israel (compared with 127 in the previous
two weeks). This increase has been uniformly attributed to pro-Palestinian supporters: As Anti-Defamation League (ADL)
president Jonathan Greenblatt noted, “no one was wearing MAGA
hats,” referring to the pro-Trump “Make America Great
Again” slogan.
Hate crimes against Jews in the U.S. had already increased by 14% in 2019.
The incidence of anti-Semitism is by far the greatest of all U.S.
religion-based hate crimes, though Jews make up only 2.4% of the
population.
It’s curious especially that so many social justice
warriors—who fiercely decry racial bigotry in every
form—actually sympathize with efforts to kill Jews and destroy the
only Jewish state by Hamas. Indeed, Palestinians in Gaza and Judea-Samaria
(the West Bank) rank as the most anti-Semitic population on earth,
with some 93 percent harboring extreme anti-Jewish racist values.
The ADL also recently released a report on seven Arab and Muslim countries
documenting incitement to hatred and violence against Jews during the
recent Israel-Hamas conflict.
The countries were Egypt, Kuwait, Mauritania, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and
Turkey, all of which are allies of the U.S., and focused on
anti-Semitism and incitement among politicians and state-sponsored clerics.
The report documented many outrageous examples of anti-Semitism, including
Turkey’s President Recep Erdoğan, claiming in a May 17 speech
that Jews “are only satisfied by sucking blood.” Such language
is reminiscent of blood libels that swept Europe during the Middle
Ages, leading to pogroms and expulsions. Blood libel pogroms reached the
Arab and Muslim world in the last few centuries, the most famous of which
took place in Damascus in 1840.
Ever since the advent of Islam, Jews were tolerated at best as second-class
citizens—known as dhimmis—and at worst were subjected
to massacres and subjugation. Even during the life of the Muslim
prophet Muhammed, Jews had to surrender to Islam or be killed, and many
indigenous Jewish tribes in the Arabian Peninsula were murdered or forcibly
converted during the early years of Muslim conquest.
The Qu’ran and Hadith are full of negative statements and even
incitement against Jews—often calling Jews “apes and
swine” and “cursed.” The most famous exemplary Hadith is
used by Hamas in its official covenant: “Judgment day will not come
until the Muslims fight the Jews. The Muslims will kill the Jews and
the Jews will hide behind rocks and trees. The rocks and trees will cry out
Oh Muslim, oh faithful servant of Allah, there is a Jew behind me. Come and
kill him.”
Preeminent Middle East historian, Bernard Lewis, writes that Muslims have
held negative stereotypes regarding Jews through most of Islamic history.
These negative stereotypes have once again arisen, and were widely
witnessed during the recent conflict.
Across the world, in places like Brussels, London and Vienna, Muslims were
filmed at rallies shouting in Arabic: “Jews, remember Khaybar, the
army of Muhammad is returning!” The chant relates to an event in the
seventh century when Muslims massacred and expelled Jews from the
town of Khaybar, located in modern-day Saudi Arabia. This battle cry
exemplifies hatred against Jews today among parts of Muslim communities, in
which old religious-based wars infect current religious beliefs.
Furthermore, the thin veneer between criticism of Israel and Jew-hatred
simply drops when violent demonstrations target synagogues and Jewish
communities. One of the most infamous instances in the recent conflict was
when a “pro-Palestinian car rally” drove through a
predominantly Jewish neighborhood in London with one participant on a
megaphone shouting: “F–k the Jews; rape their daughters.”
In Los Angeles and New York, marauding gangs of Muslims prowled the streets
seeking to identify Jews before attacking them.
During surveys undertaken between 2014 and 2019, “Extreme Antisemitism”—defined by ADL as
agreement with at least six of eleven anti-Semitic stereotypes—is
2-to-4.5-fold more common among Muslims, relative to non-Muslims,
worldwide, and regionally, including within Muslim diaspora populations in
Western Europe, and the United States.
The world’s 16 most anti-Semitic countries are all in the Muslim
Middle East, where 74% to 93% of the overwhelmingly Muslim denizens of
these nations exhibit extreme anti-Semitism—Judea-Samaria/Gaza
(Palestinians) 93%; Iraq 92%; Yemen 88%; Algeria 87%; Libya 87%; Tunisia
86%; Kuwait 82%; Bahrain 81%; Jordan 81%; Morocco 80%; Qatar 80%; United
Arab Emirates 80%; Lebanon 78%; Oman 76%; Egypt 75%; Saudi Arabia 74%.
These clear patterns should influence American foreign policy, as well as
immigration policy—including integration training of new immigrants.
Please make clear to your friends, family, colleagues and elected
representatives that as anti-Semitism spirals out of control, we cannot
allow racist Jew-hatred to be appropriated to support a
“borrowed” political agenda, such as opposition to Israel’s policies . . . or its very existence.
While many on the left are extremely vocal when calling out anti-Semitism
on the right, they are largely silent about Muslim and Arab anti-Semitism,
especially when couched as anti-Zionism. It’s time also to
acknowledge frankly that anti-Zionism is simply a form of anti-Semitism
If we are going to truly combat anti-Semitism, we should be unafraid of false accusations of racism or “Islamophobia” meant to
obfuscate reality. Indeed, it behooves us to publicize and analyze the
roots of anti-Semitism in Islam. Those who demand social justice, and those
who have been deprived of it, deserve a true accounting of history, in
which the treatment of Jews—subjugated and oppressed for centuries by
Muslims—is acknowledged openly today.
I hope you'll also take a minute, while you have this material front
and center, to forward this message to friends, visit FLAME's lively
Facebook page
and review the P.S. immediately below. It describes FLAME's new hasbarah
campaign—which exposes “The Ugly Truth About Hamas” and
those who support the terrorist group.
Best regards, Jim Sinkinson President, Facts and Logic About the Middle East (FLAME)
P.S. |
During the war between Hamas and Israel last May, many mainstream
media, as well as leftists and a few progressive politicians, opposed
Israel’s defensive actions against unprovoked missile attacks by the
Palestinian terrorist group. Some even actively supported Hamas’s
aggression. This despite the fact that Hamas is one of the world’s
most oppressive and warlike ruling parties. To dispel the myth that Hamas
is an “underdog” representing legitimate Palestinian interests,
FLAME has created a new hasbarah message called “The Ugly Truth about Hamas.” I hope you'll review this convincing, fact-based paid editorial,
which will run on July 4 in the New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune and other media nationwide. It spells out
specifically Hamas’s avowed mission to kill Jews and destroy the
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Vice President Harris and President Biden. If you agree that this kind of
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