With
the nations of Europe and the rest of the world lining up to support
the PLO bid to receive non-member state status at the UN General
Assembly, it is worth noting two anniversaries of related but forgotten
events.
Of course, everyone knows the obvious
anniversary - Nov. 29, 1947 was the day the UN General Assembly passed
the plan to recommend the partition the British Mandate of Palestine
into a Jewish state and an Arab state. The Jews accepted the plan. The
Arabs -- both local and regional - rejected it. The
local Arabs who 25 years later became known as "Palestinians,"
responded to the passage of UNGA resolution 181 by launching a terror
war against the Jews. Their war was commanded by Iraqi
and Lebanese terror masters and supported by the British military and
its Arab Legion from Transjordan.
On May 15, 1948 five foreign
Arab armies invaded the just-declared Jewish state with the declared aim
of annihilating all the Jews.
Now for a couple less known anniversaries
On November 28, 1941 the religious and political leader
of the Palestinian Arabs and one of the most influential leaders of the
Arab world Haj Amin el Husseini
met with Adolf Hitler in Berlin. Husseini had courted the Nazis since
just after the Nazis rose to power in 1933. Husseini was forced to flee
the British Mandate in 1937 when he expanded his fourth terror war
against the Jews, that he began in 1936 to include the British as well.
He fled to Lebanon, and then in October 1939 he fled to Iraq. In April 1941 he fomented a pro-Nazi coup in Iraq.
As the British -- with massive unheralded assistance from the Jews from
the land of Israel -- were poised to enter Baghdad and restore the
pro-British government, Husseini incited the Farhud,
a 3-day pogrom against the Jews of Baghdad that took place over the
festival of Shavuot. 150 Jews were murdered. A thousand were wounded and
900 Jewish homes were destroyed.
With the coup defeated and the Jews murdered, Husseini escaped to then pro-Nazi Iran and then in October to Germany by way of Italy. (He was flown out of Iran on an Italian Air Force plane, and feted by Mussolini when he landed in Rome).
He arrived in Berlin and two and a half weeks later he had a prolonged private meeting with Hitler. There, on November 28, 1941, two months before the Wannssee Conference,
where the German high command received its first orders to annihilate
European Jewry, Hitler told Husseini that he intended to eradicate the
Jewish people from the face of Europe.
Husseini remained in Berlin through the end of the war and served as a Nazi agent.
In Berlin he broadcast daily diatribes to the Arab world on German
shortwave radio in Arabic. Specifically Husseini exhorted them to kill
the Jews in the name of Allah and make common cause with the Nazis who
would deliver them from the Jews, the British and the Americans.
In 1943 Husseini organized the Hazhar SS Division of Bosnian
Muslims. His division carried out the massacre of 90 percent of the
Bosnian Jewish community of 12,000.
In 1920 Husseini
personally invented what later became known as the Palestinian national
movement. He shaped its identity around the sole cause of destroying the
Jewish presence in the land of Israel.
During the war Husseini used his broadcasts to shape the
political and religious consciousness of the Muslim world by fusing
Islamic Jew hatred with annihilationist Nazi anti-Semitism. Whereas much
of the Nazi anti-Semitic ideology was discredited in postwar Europe, it
has remained the single most resonant theme of Arab politics since
World War II.
In 1946, as his fellow Nazi war criminals were being tried in Nuremberg,
Husseini made a triumphant return to Egypt where he was welcomed as a
war hero by King Farouk, the Muslim Brotherhood and the young officers
in the Egyptian army who fused Nazi national socialism with the Islamism
of the Muslim Brotherhood and took over Egypt after deposing Farouk in 1951.
The
founder of Palestinian nationalism's singleminded dedication to the
genocide of Jewry brings us to the second notable but forgotten
anniversary we passed over this month.
On Nov. 12 1942 the British led forces -- with the
massive and unreported support of Jewish commando and engineering units
from the land of Israel -- defeated Germany's Afrika Corps led by Gen.
Rommel in the second Battle of Alamein. With the German defeat, the specter of a German occupation of the Middle East was removed. Husseini
and Himmler had planned that under German occupation, the Arabs would
expand the Holocaust to the 800,000 Jews of the Arab world and the
450,000 Jews in the land of Israel. To this end, the
Germans had organized the Einzatzgruppen Afrika unit attached to
Rommel's army. Under the command of SS LTC Walter Rauff, it was tasked
with murdering Jews located in the areas that were to come under German
occupation.
It is fitting that yesterday, on the anniversary of Hitler's
meeting with Husseini, Germany announced that it would not oppose
Husseini's heirs' bid to receive UN recognition of a Palestinian state
that seeks Israel's destruction.
Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.
The more things change, the more they remain the same.
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