Dr. Andrew Bostom
[A] Jew [is] of that most contemptible of religions, the most
vile of faiths…They, both the ancient and modern [Jews], are altogether
the worst liars…They are the filthiest and vilest of peoples, their
unbelief horrid, their ignorance abominable.
The vilest infidel ape [i.e., Jews; per Koran 5:60, 2:65, 7:166]…Do not consider that killing them [Jews] is treachery.
I recalled those words (above) from my The Legacy of Islamic Antisemitism in the aftermath of French Muslim jihadist Mehdi Nemmouche’s arrest for the brutal jihad carnage
Saturday, May 24, 2014, at the Brussels Jewish Museum. Today, June 6,
2014, a fourth victim, critically injured during the attack, died from their wounds.
Nemmouche—who had joined the anti-Assad regime jihad in Syria— recorded a celebratory video which displayed the weapons he used for the attack (unwrapped from within a white sheet scrawled with the name of the jihadist group, “The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant”), identified him as the killer of the Jews, and proclaimed his desire to lay waste to Brussels.
We also learned that Nemmouche, a recidivist criminal, during
the last 2 years of a 5-year prison term before sojourning in Syria,
was kept isolated because of his aggressive Islamic proselytism. He grew
a beard, donned a djellaba (characteristic North African Muslim robe),
and performed the five Muslim prayers a day. Nemmouche had no apparent
interest in television while imprisoned until jihadist Muhammad Merah went on his killing spree—including,
notably, March 19, 2012 in Toulouse, at the Ozar Hatorah day school,
where Merah shot dead Rabbi Yonathan Sandler, 30, his sons Aryeh, 6, and
Gabriel, 3, as well as Miriam Monsonego, 7, while critically wounding
Brian Aaron Bijaoui, 15, who was protecting other pupils. Jubilant at Merah’s murderous exploits, Nemmouche asked for a television set in his cell. When the Merah affair ended, Nemmouche told prison officials to remove the TV.
Consistent with the debased, cultural relativist Pavlovian
conditioning about Islam which prevails throughout Europe, French
Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve opined
that pious Muslim Nemmouche’s lethal rampage, targeting Jews, had
“nothing to do with Islam.” World Jewish Congress President Ronald
Lauder, addressing the media after commemorative prayers for the slain Jews in Brussels, suggested ruefully—if perversely—that
somehow Nemmouche’s jihadist executions revealed a lack of
understanding about The Holocaust, and pleaded for more education on the
subject:
I understand more and more that the lessons of the Holocaust are
not being taught because too often people say, “Well, how about the
Palestinians?” They’re all difficult problems, but the Holocaust was
something very, very special, special here in Belgium and special
throughout Europe. And I think it’s important that this whole thing
starts with education.
Even Ivan Riafoul, an exceedingly rare, but far more honest French commentator, willing to acknowledge some inculpatory role for Islam, asserted only “radical Islam” was responsible for “this new anti-semitism,” which had allegedly just materialized “since the year 2000.”
Past as prologue, the opening quotes I cited—within their appropriate
doctrinal and historical context—underscore this pervasive modern
ignorance (and/or denial) about the millennial legacy of canonical Islamic Jew-hatred, and jihadism, in Europe. Ibn Hazm (d. 1064), an important Muslim jurist, and Abu Ishaq el-Biri, a prominent mid-11th century Muslim poet, made the opening observations about Jews, while residing in mythically “ecumenical,” Muslim-controlled Spain. Their inflammatory rhetoric,
particularly the Koranic epithet “ape” for Jews, was common parlance,
which ultimately precipitated the mass slaughter and destruction of the
Jewish community in Granada, during a 1066 pogrom by rampaging Muslims. It is estimated that up to four thousand
Jews perished. This figure equals or exceeds the number of Jews
reportedly killed by the Crusaders during their pillage of the
Rhineland, some thirty years later, at the outset of the First Crusade. A
contemporary chronicle
written by sultan Abd Allah (who became Sultan of Granada in 1073)
confirms that a breach in the humiliating and discriminatory
Sharia-based system of dhimmitude for non-Muslims, including Jews, also contributed to this outburst of anti-Jewish jihad violence by the Muslims of Granada:
Both the common people and the nobles were disgusted by the
cunning of the Jews, the notorious changes they had brought in the order
of things, and the positions they occupied in violation of their pact [i.e., the dhimma, per Koran 9:29, imposed by jihad].
Allah decreed their destruction on Saturday 10 Safar 459 (December 31,
1066). . . . The Jew [Joseph Ibn Naghrela; communal leader] fled into
the interior of the palace, but the mob pursued him there, seized him,
and killed him. They then put every Jew in the city to the sword and
took vast quantities of their property.
Willful negation of this living legacy of “sacralized” Muslim bigotry
and bellicosity—an acute physical threat to Europe’s beleaguered (and preparing for flight) Jewish minority—is symptomatic of what has been wrought by the ugly “Eurabian” transformation of the continent.
The use of the term “Eurabia,” as noted by historian Bat Ye’or, was first introduced, triumphantly, in the mid-1970s, as the title of a journal (i.e., Eurabia) produced by the Association for Franco-Arab Solidarity, and published in Geneva, Paris, and London. The articles and editorials in this publication called for
common Euro-Arab positions, at every level—social, economic, and
commercial—and were contingent upon the fundamental political condition
of European support for the Arab (and non-Arab) Muslim umma’s jihad
against Israel. These concrete proposals
were not the musings of isolated theorists—they in fact represented
policy decisions conceived in conjunction with, and actualized by,
European state leaders, their ministers of foreign affairs, and European
Parliamentarians.
Ten years ago (in 2004), Bat Ye’or summarized
the bitter harvest western Europe was reaping from the sociopolitical
and cultural changes it had sewn over the intervening three decades, the
result,
of a global movement that is transforming Europe into a new continent of dhimmitude within a worldwide strategy of jihad and da’wa, the latter being the pacific method of Islamization . . . this policy of dhimmitude* for the Euro-Arabian continent . . . entitled “Dialogue between Peoples and Cultures in the Euro-Mediterranean Region”
was accepted by the European Union in December 2003. Unfortunately, the
policy of “Dialogue” with the Arab League nations, willfully pursued by
Europe for the past three decades, has promoted European dhimmitude* and rabid Judeophobia.
*(Note: dhimmitude illustrated—Cover
art for the Report by the High-Level Advisory Group established at the
initiative of the President of the European Commission, “Dialogue between Peoples and Cultures in the Euro-Mediterranean Region,”
Brussels, October 2003, As the report observed, “The orientation of
this map corresponds to the world view of the Arab cartographers [i.e.,
Idrisi, from 1154 C.E.] of the Middle Ages”—that is, reinforcing
Islamic jihad supremacism, and reversing the true geographical
orientation of the Mediterranean Sea, with the North African
Mediterranean littoral on top of the Southern European Mediterranean
littoral.)
And rabid Judeophobia, i.e., Jew-hatred, per Bat Ye’or’s 2004 assessment, is an apposite characterization.
Two reports published in 2011 highlighted the antisemitic attitudes
being broadly inculcated among European Muslim youth. Belgian Professor
of Sociology Mark Elchardus co-authored a 426 pp. analysis
of views within the young Belgian Muslim community, primarily, 12-18
year olds. Professor Elchardus summarized his findings in two lay press
interviews (here; here), as follows:
[H]alf of the Muslim pupils can be describe as antisemitic, which
is very high. Worse is that that anti-Jewish feelings have nothing to
do with a low level of education or social deprivation, as is the case
with native-born racists. The antisemitism among the Muslim
youths is theologically inspired, and there is a direct link between
Islam and antisemitic feelings… The sole relevant factor is Muslim
traditionalism…There are few progressive [non-traditionalist]Muslims. For every 8 progressive Muslims, one finds 100 conservatives [traditionalists].
Elchardus added, with regard to Belgian Muslim community educational and advocacy organizations,
Muslim organizations are meant to play a major role in the
integration of Muslims in society. It is regrettable that none of these
organizations condemn anti-Semitism…Nor did any of them [Muslim
organizations] announce that they would provide informal education for
the Muslim youngsters who have these prejudices. In short: Muslim
organizations either denied our studies’ findings, or remained silent
about them.
Researcher Gunther Jikeli’s 2011 report yielded concordant results. Jikeli conducted 117 interviews with Muslims from Berlin, Paris, and London, whose mean age was 19 years-old. He concluded,
The majority voiced some or strong antisemitic feelings.
They openly express their negative viewpoints toward Jews. This is often
done with aggression and sometimes includes intentions to carry out
antisemitic acts. They usually do not differentiate at
all between Jews and Israelis. Their view of the Middle East conflict
can be used by them as a justification of a general, hostile attitude toward Jews including German, French and English Jews.
They often claim that Jews have stolen Palestinian-Arab or
alternatively, Muslim land. This is a major contention for them to
delegitimize the State of Israel. The expression “Jews kill children” is
also heard frequently. It is a supportive argument for their opinion
that Israel is fundamentally evil. As they do not make any
distinction between Israelis and Jews in general, this becomes further
proof for the “vicious character” of Jews. It also makes them very
emotive. The assumption of a general or even eternal enmity between Muslims and Jews is widespread.
Jikeli, a convert to Islam, with clear apologetic sympathies for Muslims, nevertheless added this critical observation, albeit in the most understated manner:
Antisemitism may be strengthened further by referring to a general negative attitude by the Muslim community toward Jews. References to the Koran or the Hadith may also be used with the implication that Allah agrees with this viewpoint.
Indeed, Islam’s canonical texts—the Koran itself (see here), and the “traditions” of Islam’s prophet Muhammad (the hadith, and sira; see here)—are redolent
with Islamic Jew-hatred. This hateful material was catalogued—and
extolled—by the late Sunni Muslim Papal equivalent, Sheikh Muhammad
Sayyid Tantawi, who served as the Grand Imam of Sunni Islam’s Vatican,
Cairo’s Al Azhar University, for 14 years, from 1996, till his death in
March 2010. Tantawi’s “academic” magnum opus, a 700 page treatise
entitled, “Jews in the Koran and the Traditions”, includes this summary Koranic rationalization for Muslim Jew-hatred:
[The] Koran describes the Jews with their own particular
degenerate characteristics, i.e. killing the prophets of Allah [see
Koran 2:61/ 3:112 ], [and see al-Azhar Sheikh Saqr's contemporary Koranic citations,
“Jews' 20 Bad Traits As Described in the Qur'an”] 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…only a minority of the Jews keep their word…[A]ll Jews
are not the same. The good ones become Muslims [Koran 3:113 ], the bad ones do not.
More ominously, Tantawi’s exhaustive modern analysis of Islam’s defining, canonical sources concluded by sanctioning these bigoted—even violent—Muslim behaviors towards Jews:
[T]he Jews always remain maleficent deniers….they should desist
from their negative denial…some Jews went way overboard in their denying
hostility, so gentle persuasion can do no good with them, so use force
with them and treat them in the way you see as effective in ridding them
of their evil. One may go so far as to ban their religion, their
persons, their wealth, and their villages.
Tantawi’s successor, Ahmad Al-Tayeb, current Grand Imam of Al-Azhar, has publicly reiterated this sacralized, Jew-hating bigotry. During an interview with Al-Tayeb, which aired on Channel 1, Egyptian TV, October 25, 2013, he gave a brief explanation of the ongoing relevance of the Koranic verse 5:82 which has been invoked—“successfully”—to inspire Muslim hatred of Jews since the advent of Islam:
A verse in the Koran explains the Muslims’ relations with the Jews…This is an historical perspective, which has not changed to this day. See how we suffer today from global Zionism and Judaism…Since
the inception of Islam 1,400 years ago, we have been suffering from
Jewish and Zionist interference in Muslim affairs. This is a cause of
great distress for the Muslims. The Koran said it and history has proven
it: “You shall find the strongest among men in enmity to the believers to be the Jews…”
The impact of such sacralized, mainstream
Islamic Jew-hatred on Western Europe’s burgeoning Muslim community has
been readily apparent. During February of 2008, then European
Commissioner for Justice, Freedom, and Security, Franco Frattini, the
European Union (EU) official responsible “for combating racism and
Antisemitism in Europe,” revealed
that Muslims were responsible for fully half (50%) of the documented
Antisemitic incidents on the European continent. Demographic data from
2007 indicated that the total number of Europeans then was 494.8 million; estimates of the number of Muslims in Europe ranged from 15-20 million, or some ~3.0-4.0% of the total European population. Thus,
on a population percentage basis, Muslims in Europe at that time
already accounted for roughly 24.0 to 32.3 times the number of
Antisemitic incidents as their non-Muslim European counterparts! An even
greater statistical disparity, i.e., Muslim far greater than
non-Muslim, would have been evident then—and now—if comparisons were
limited to severely injurious or murderous acts of antisemitic violence.
These 2007/2008 data were in turn consistent with previous findings
from 2006 on the excess prevalence of frank Antisemitism reported
amongst European Muslims, published in The Journal of Conflict
Resolution by Yale University biostatistician Dr. Edward H. Kaplan, and
Dr. Charles A. Small of the Yale Institute for the Study of Global
Antisemitism. (“Anti-Israel Sentiment Predicts Antisemitism in Europe,” Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2006, Vol. 50, pp. 548-561.)
Drs. Kaplan and Small examined
the views of 5004 Europeans, roughly 500 individuals sampled from each
of 10 Western European countries (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France,
Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland, and the United
Kingdom). The authors’ main publicized results confirmed their (rather
commonsensical) a priori hypothesis: anti-Israel sentiments strongly and
independently predicted the likelihood that an individual was
Antisemitic in a graded manner, i.e., the more anti-Israel (on a scale
of zero to 4), the more a person was likely to be Antisemitic.
But a much more striking and relevant finding
by Kaplan and Small, given the burgeoning Jew hatred evident in
Europe’s Muslim communities, received far less attention: in a
controlled comparison to European Christians (as the “referent” group),
European Muslims were nearly eightfold (i.e., 800%) more likely to be overtly Antisemitic.
(“Anti-Israel Sentiment Predicts Antisemitism in Europe,” p. 557 and
Table 3, p. 558.) Furthermore, in light of the Pew Global Attitudes
Project data on Muslim attitudes toward Jews in Islamic countries, the
Yale study likely underestimated the extent of Antisemitism amongst
Europe’s Muslim communities, had more poorly educated, less acclimated
European Muslims been sampled. Pew’s earlier international survey
indicated (“The Great Divide: How Westerners and Muslims View Each Other,” Pew Global Attitudes Project, June 22, 2006.),
In the Muslim world, attitudes toward Jews remain starkly
negative, including virtually unanimous unfavorable ratings of 98% in
Jordan and 97% in Egypt.
A month prior to the murderous jihadist attack on Brussels Jewry, May 24th,
the Union of Islamic Organizations of France [UOIF], the French branch
of the European Council for Fatwa and Research (led by Yusuf al
Qaradawi) held its 31st annual conference in Le Bourget, north of Paris, between April 18-21. Professor Guy Milliere provided an overview of the proceedings:
As usual, jihadist and antisemitic books, which are banned in
French bookstores but tolerated there, were offered in several booths.
As usual also, speakers were invited to deliver fiery speeches.
Keynote speaker Hani Ramadan, intimately tied, like his better known brother, Tariq, to the Muslim Brotherhood, gave an address,
devoted to “global threats” facing Islam; he described them as having a single source: “the Jews and Zionist barbarism,”
an octopus “hiding in the shadows,” a “power that holds the global
finance and the media.” He called on young French Muslims to “fight for
Islam” and to go to Syria, where several hundred French youths have
already joined jihadist groups.
Milliere concluded, aptly:
If UOIF had only a marginal influence, such statements would be already worrying. But
UOIF is the leading French Muslim organization, and Hani Ramadan’s
speech, like Tariq Ramadan’s speeches in 2012 and 2013, was listened to
by an audience of 150,000 enthusiastic people, and viewed by hundred of
thousands of others on UOIF-TV, the digital television channel established by the UOIF.
Shortly before Mehdi Nemmouche’s apprehension, Tariq Ramadan speculated on his Facebook page
that the Brussels Jewish Museum attack was perhaps a justifiable
killing of “Israeli agents.” Ramadan’s invocation of thinly-veiled,
anti-Jewish conspiracism was accompanied
by a torrent of approving, if explicitly Jew-hating comments from his
Muslim admirers, who (oblivious to their own hatred) denounced the
alleged “stigmatization of Muslims.” None of this raw bigotry was
challenged by Tariq Ramadan.
Speaking at a reception to celebrate Israel’s Independence Day, May 26, 2014, Czech Republic President Miloš Zeman,
emerged as the lone European leader willing to identify and condemn,
without equivocation, the jihadist, Jew-hating Islamic ideology
responsible for the Brussels Jewish Museum carnage. Clearly not lost on
President Zeman is the related hypocrisy of the European Union’s
Eurabian mindset which recognizes the newly spatchcocked Hamas-Fatah “unity government.” Citing the Hamas Covenant—a document rife with canonical Islamic Jew-hatred and jihadism, from beginning to end—Zeman observed:
There was a hideous assassination in the flower of Europe in the
heart of the European Union in a Jewish museum in Brussels. I will not
let myself being calmed down by the declaration that there are only tiny
fringe groups behind it… [L]et me quote one of their sacred texts to
support this statement: “A tree says, there is a Jew behind me, come and
kill him. A stone says, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him.”
[from, Sahih Muslim, Book 041, #6985]
Do we really want to pretend that this is an extreme viewpoint? Do we
really want to be politically correct and say that everyone is nice and
only a small group of extremists and fundamentalists is committing such
crimes?
Zeman courageously shattered a rigidly enforced European taboo which
proscribes elucidating the direct nexus between canonical Islam, and the
jihadist depredations against European Jewry. But Zeman’s singular
clarity also stands as a bitter reminder of how this requisite discourse
is so glaringly absent across Europe cum Eurabia, and why conditions for Jews will continue to deteriorate as the Islamic onslaught continues virtually unopposed.
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