reply by JC 4/8/2002 (24:08) |
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Through the speech, Arafat repeated several time a crucial slogan -- 'a contract is a contract, and a vow is a vow' -- which the audience chanted with him. The use of this Islamist saying, usually associated with the HAMAS, is most important to understanding Arafat's state of mind. The slogan differentiates between the two forms of agreement acceptable to Muslims. A contract, such as Prophet Muhammad's Treaty of Hudaibiya (that Muhammad unilaterally violated, leading to the slaughter of Jews) or Arafat's own agreements with Israel, is a transient form of agreement signed for its expediency at the time, and which a Believer is not obliged to abide by once it has outlived its usefulness. A vow -- such as the declaration of the entire land of Israel 'from the sea to the river' as a sacred Waqf -- is a religious obligation that is eternal and no Muslim can disavow. Thus, by adopting this slogan, Arafat is saying that nobody should confuse between the transient agreements with Israel and the sacred commitment to the entire land of Israel. 'Particularly in this hour and under these conditions, we are all obliged to this slogan, and we should comprehend that the campaigns facing us will be far more difficult and thus demand both Palestinian and Arab depth [of commitment],' Arafat concluded his speech.(41)
Should there has been a doubt about Arafat's position and intentions, Hassan al-Turabi clarifies them. Discussing Islam as the key to the future of the world, Turabi touched on the Jewish question. Islam cannot accept the State of Israel as a Jewish State 'because this country is based on violence, genocide and aggression.' Instead, Turabi envisions a regional entity dominated by Muslims in which Jews and Christians will live as Dhimmis in accordance with the principles of the Umariyah. Turabi does not believe the Jews will rule Israel for long because 'God didn't give Israel to the Hebrews for eternity. The Qu'ran explains it clearly.' Throughout history, Jews have been evicted and exiled from Palestine several times by armies empowered by God to punish them for their sins. 'This lesson is important for the Muslims too,' Turabi suggests. Moreover, Jewish transgression against Prophet Muhammad led to their eviction from Arabia, a precedent frequently cited by both Arafat and the Islamists as the justification for the irreconcilable enmity between Muslims and Jews.
Turabi has no doubt about Arafat's position on these issues. Arafat is striving to reach 'reconciliation between the PLO which he leads and the Islamist movement HAMAS,' and Turabi is assisting him in this regard. The seeming differences between Arafat and the Islamists -- be they the HAMAS or Turabi himself -- are not as big as they seem. Turabi thinks Arafat 'was wrong to sign the Oslo accords with the Israelis' but his error lies in the choice of venues to reach their common objective. Turabi has no doubt that 'in reality, he [Arafat] aspires to the same thing as I. I'm certain that at the bottom of his heart, nothing separates us with regard to our ultimate aims.' Only the strategies of Arafat and the Islamists diverge, their ultimate objective is identical, Turabi insists. As for this ultimate objective -- Turabi has clearly stated his, and thus Arafat's as well.(42)
And these are not empty threats. Recently, in late October 1997, anti-Semitic conspiracy themes identifying the Jews as controlling both the US and Israel constituted the underlining logic of the Communique of the Vanguard of Conquest and the Jihad Group -- both under the command of Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri, a close protégé of Hassan al-Turabi. 'The Islamic Jihad against America's world dominance, the international influence of the Jews, and the US occupation of Muslim lands will continue,' the Communique declared. 'The United States realizes that its real enemy, as it has declared many times, is Islamic extremism, by which it means the Islamic Jihad, the Jihad of the entire Muslim nation against the world dominance of America, the international influence of the Jews, and the US occupation of Muslim lands. The Islamic Jihad is against the theft of the Muslim Ummah's riches, this disgusting robbery, the like of which has not been witnessed in history.' To avert the promised wave of violence against the US and its Middle East allies, the US must evict the region and face the establishment of Islamic governments. Otherwise, the Islamists promise a relentless terrorism campaign against the US. 'Yes, America's enemy is Islamic extremism, meaning the Islamic Jihad against America's preeminence ... the Islamic Jihad which stands against Jewish expansion.' (43) Zawahiri's terrorists are responsible for the terrorist carnage in Luxor, Egypt.
Meanwhile, in early December 1997, Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri's Jihad Group determined that a fateful confrontation between the US and militant Islam, in which the Jihad intends to 'offer martyrs', is both inevitable and imminent. 'A conflict between the Muslim Ummah [nation] and the United States is unavoidable; in fact we have no other option but to confront atheism and its ringleader, the United States, which is confronting us everywhere.' In a special Bulletin, the Jihad identifies Israel as the American spearhead in the Hub of Islam, and offers the only viable solution to this problem. 'The Islamic Ummah rejects Israel's existence in the first place, let alone its continuing aggression and repeated massacres against us.' However, the forthcoming terroristic Jihad will not be limited to strikes against Israel. 'With Allah's help, we know the United States well,' the Jihad Bulletin notes, 'we also know its weaknesses.' The Bulletin stresses that 'the most vulnerable spot of the United States and Israel is to send them the bodies of their sons.' Therefore, the Jihad declares, 'we should throw in their faces the flesh of their sons, minced and grilled. The United States must pay the price; it must pay dearly.' Zawahiri's Jihad Group has no doubt about the ultimate objective of the forthcoming confrontation. 'The Americans themselves admitted half of the truth when they said that the United States' first enemy is Islamic extremism, but they hid the other half, namely that the United States' destruction will -- InshAllah -- be at the hands of Muslims.'(44)
Meanwhile, Arafat's own PLO/PA is not far behind the Islamists' Jihad in both repeating the classic anti-Semitic themes, and in anticipating the resumption of struggle against both Israel and the Jews. PA-controlled media is intensifying its virulent anti-Jewish and anti-Judaism incitement. Thus, for example, in late July, Arafat's own organ -- al-Hayah al-Jadidah -- reported and endorsed the research of one Ahmad al-Awadeh on 'The History of the Conflict Between Muslims and Jews'. The study ascertains that the Jews still live by the principles of the Talmud and The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Hence, Awadeh concludes and al-Hayah al-Jadidah endorses, the conflict between Muslim and Jews is an eternal conflict, similar to the conflict between mankind. For their part, the Palestinians have to serve as the vanguard of the entire Muslim World in this eternal battle of both Muslims and all other nations against the 'nation of Jews.'(45) And these sentiments are manifested in call for action by senior PA leaders. On December 2, 1997, for example, Saadi al-Karnaz, a member of the PA's Legislative Council, openly called on PA TV for a struggle against the Jews in order to destroy Israel and establish a Palestinian state in its stead. 'Our struggle is still necessary, we are still at the beginning of the road. Our war with Israel and the Jews has not ended and will not end until the establishment of a Palestinian state on the entire land of Palestine.'(46)
And as history should have taught the Jews, wherever they are, in Israel or in the Diaspora, that the anti-Semites mean what they say and would do their utmost to implement what they preach.
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END NOTES
1. This paper is derived from the author's forthcoming book ISLAMIC ANTI-SEMITISM
AS A POLITICAL INSTRUMENT sponsored by The Freeman Center For Strategic Studies.
The opinions expressed in this paper are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the members of the Task Force on Terrorism and Unconventional Warfare of the U.S. House of Representatives, U.S. Congress, or any other branch of the U.S. Government.
2. Sharon, Moshe. Preface to Bat Ye'or [pseud.], The Dhimmis -- Proteges: Jews and Christians under the Shadow of Islam, [Hebrew translation], Jerusalem, Kana, 1986, p. 29
3. Jameelah, Maryam. Islam versus Ahl al-Kitab, Delhi, Taj, 1989 (a reprint of a Pakistani edition), p. 11
4. For an overall discussion of the history of Jews under Islam see: Lewis, Bernard. The Jews of Islam, Princeton NJ, Princeton University Press, 1984; Bat Ye'or [pseud.], The Dhimmi: Jews and Christians under Islam, Rutherford NJ, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1996 (orig. 1980 & 1985)
5. Lewis, Bernard. Semites and Anti-Semites: An Inquiry into Conflict and Prejudice, New York NY, W.W.Norton, 1986, p. 121
6. Bat Ye'or [pseud]. The Dhimmi, Rutherford NJ, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1996 (1985); Bat Ye'or [pseud]. The Decline of Eastern Christianity under Islam, Rutherford NJ, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1996; Bat Ye'or [pseud]. Juifs et Chrestiens sous l'Islam [Jews and Christians under Islam], Paris, Berg International, 1994.
7. Lewis, Semites and Anti-Semites, op.cit., pp. 124-139
8. Elpeleg, Zvi. HaMufti haGadol [Grand Mufti], Tel-Aviv, Misrad Habitakhon -- Hotsaa Laor, 1989; Elpeleg, Zvi (ed.). MiNekudat Reuto shel haMufti [In the Eyes of the Mufti], Tel-Aviv, Hakibutz haMeuhad, 1995; Lebel, Jennie. Hajj Amin veBerlin [Hajj Amin and Berlin], Tel-Aviv, 1996
9. Harkabi, Yehoshafat. Emdat haAravim beSikhsukh Yisrael-Arav [The Arabs' Position in the Arab-Israeli Conflict], Tel Aviv, Dvir, 1968, pp. 173-177
10. al-Thal, Abd-Allah. The Danger of International Judaism to Islam and Christianity. Cairo, Dar al-Qalam, 1964, p. 171; cited in Harkabi, Yehoshafat. Emdat haAravim beSikhsukh Yisrael-Arav [The Arabs' Position in the Arab-Israeli Conflict], Tel Aviv, Dvir, 1968, p. 190
11. Harkabi, Emdat HaAravim, op.cit., pp. 210-212
12. Farooqi, Misbahul Islam. The Jewish Conspiracy and the Muslim World, Kuala Lumpur, Thinker's Library SDN BHD, 1991 (a reprint of a Pakistani edition of 1967). This collection of essays as well as the entire text of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion is still being reprinted and distributed throughout the Muslim World.
13. al-Thal, op.cit., pp. 170-171; cited in Harkabi, Emdat HaAravim, op.cit., p. 224
14. Heikal, Mohammed. Secret Channels: The Inside Story of Arab-Israeli Peace Negotiations, London, HarperCollins, 1996, p. 87
15. Nettler, Ronald L. Past Trials and Present Tribulation, Oxford, Pergamon Press, 1987, pp. 19-20
16. Taheri, Amir. Holy Terror, London, Huchinson, 1987, p. 174
17. Qutb, Sayyid Muhammad. Ma'arakatuna Ma'a al-Yahud [Our Struggle with the Jews]; an English translation in Nettler, op.cit., pp. 71-87
18. Nettler, op.cit., pp. 25-31
19. Al-Munaged, Dr. Salah Al-Din, The Pillars of Naqbah: A Scientific Discussion in the Roots of the June 5 Defeat, Beirut, 1968; Tr. in cited in Harkabi, Yehoshafat (ed.), Lekakh haAravim miTvusatam [Arab Lessons from their Defeat], Tel Aviv, Am Oved, 1969, pp. 115-183
20. [Proceedings of] The Fourth Conference of the Academy of Islamic Research, Cairo, General Organization for Government Printing Offices, 1970; Analyzed in Green D.F. (Ed.), Arab Theologians on Jews and Israel, Geneva, Editions de l'Avenir, 1971.
21. Taheri, Holy Terror, op.cit., p. 206
22. Ajami, Fouad. The Arab Predicament, Cambridge MA, Cambridge University Press, 1981, p. 181
23. Yadlin, Rivka. Genius Yahir veOsheq [Arrogant and Oppressive Genious: Anti-Zionism as Anti-Judaism in Egypt], Jerusalem, The Zalman Shazar Center, 1988; Stav, Arie. HaShalom -- Karikatura Aravit [The Peace -- Arab Caricature], Tel-Aviv, Zmora-Bitan, 1996; Israeli, Raphael. Fundamentalist Islam and Israel, Lanham MD, University Press of America, 1993, pp. 73-94
24. Mahmud, Shaykh Abd-al-Halim. Jihad and Victory, Cairo, 1979, p. 150; Cited in Nettler, op.cit., pp. 21-22
25. Khalidi, Dr. Salah. The Jewish Mentality Based on the Qu'ran, Damascus, 1987. Cited in Sharon, Moshe. Judaism in the Context of Diverse Civilizations, Johannesburg, 1993, p. 129.
26. The Imam Versus Zionism, Tehran, Ministry of Islamic Guidance, 1984.
27. Kramer, Martin. Commentary, October 1994; Webman, Esther. Anti-Semitic Motifs in the Ideology of HizbAllah and HAMAS, Tel-Aviv, Tel-Aviv University, 1994
28. Middle East Insight, March-April 1988
29. Raphaeli, op.cit., pp. 123-168; Abu-Amr, Ziad. Islamic Fundamentalism in the West Bank and Gaza: Muslim Brotherhood and Islamic Jihad, Bloomington IN, Indiana University Press, 1994, pp. 63-89; Milton-Edwards, Beverley. Islamic Politics in Palestine, London, Tauris Academic Studies, 1966, pp.185-193
30. Ayatollah Muhammad Baqer al-Sadr, Sarcheshmeh Qodarat dar Hokumat Eslami [The Source of Power in the Islamic Government/State], Tehran, 1980, p. 37
31. Roy, Olivier. L'echec de l'Islam politique, Paris, Editions du Seuil, 1992, pp. 112-113 [English tr: Roy, Olivier. The Failure of Political Islam, Cambridge MA, Harvard University Press, 1994, p. 85]
32. Hoveyda, Fereydoun. L'Islam Bloque [The Blocked Islam], Paris, Robert Laffont, 1992, pp. 13-15
33. Roy, op.cit., p. 153 [Eng. p.120]
34. Jameelah, op.cit., p. 23
35. Heikal, op.cit., pp. 12-13
36. al-Thal, op.cit., p. 66; cited in Harkabi, Emdat HaAravim, op.cit., p. 249
37. Maulana Abdul Aziz, Introduction, in Farooqi, Misbahul Islam. The Jewish Conspiracy and the Muslim World, Kuala Lumpur, Thinker's Library SDN BHD, 1991 (a reprint of a Pakistani edition of 1967), pp. 24-25
38. Jameelah, op.cit., pp. xvii-xviii
39. Jameelah, op.cit., p. 412
40. Shu'un al-Awsat, 14 December 1992
41. Bodansky, Yossef. Arafat's Peace Process, Tel-Aviv, the Ariel Center for Policy Research, 1997, pp. 64-65
42. Al-Tourabi, Hassan. Islam -- Avenir du Monde [Islam -- The Future of the World], Paris, Editions JC Lattes, 1997, pp. 270-277
43. Al-Hayah, 29 October 1997
44. A Jihad Bulletin in Al-Mujahidun, December 1997; Salah, Muhammad. Al-Hayah, 8 December 1997
45. Ha'etzni, Nadav. Ma'ariv, 12 September 1997
46. Palestinian Television, 2 December 1997; Translated in Palestinian Media Review, 2-3 December 1997
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