By Jeff Jacoby
Sunday, November 24, 2013
THEY WEREN'T wearing swastika armbands or chanting
"Sieg Heil!" during the Islamic Jihad rally this month on the campus
of Al-Quds University. They didn't need to. Everything about the event reeked
of fascism and anti-Semitic bloodlust. Demonstrators at the Palestinian school
paraded in paramilitary gear, with massed black flags, mock assault weapons,
and arms extended in Nazi-style salutes. There were banners lionizing suicide
bombers, and hand-drawn Israeli flags on which students trod. Islamic Jihad —
long identified as a terrorist organization by the United States and the
European Union — posted photos of the rally on its website. In one, students
representing dead Israelis sprawl on the ground as black-clad jihadists
brandishing weapons stride past.
Such celebrations of terrorism and incitement to violence
are pervasive in Palestinian society. Children raised under the Palestinian
Authority are indoctrinated from an early age to regard Israelis and Jews as
enemies to be destroyed and infidels to be loathed. Nothing about the nearly
three-hour rally at Al-Quds would likely have surprised the estimated 1,000
students who saw it. Most of them have been fed a steady diet of such poison
all their lives, and not just in schools and mosques. From TV shows and popular
music to the naming of sports clubs and public squares, the next generation of
Palestinians has grown up amid the most violent culture of Jew-hatred since the
Third Reich.
A fog of political correctness usually keeps events like
the Al-Quds rally from getting much attention in the Western media. But this
one, first reported by veteran British journalist Tom Gross, made news last
week when it led Brandeis University into suspending a longstanding academic
partnership with the Palestinian school. It wasn't the grotesque rally itself
that provoked Brandeis to pull the plug, though that should have been
sufficient: One of Islamic Jihad's many innocent victims was a 20-year-old
Brandeis undergraduate, Alisa Flatow, who was one of eight people murdered in
1995 when an Islamic Jihad bomber blew up the bus in which they were riding.
What finally forced the issue was the refusal of Sari
Nusseibeh, the president of Al-Quds and a well-known Palestinian intellectual,
to condemn the hate-drenched rally even after being asked to do so by Brandeis
president Frederick Lawrence. Nusseibeh replied instead with an outrageous
letter that denounced "vilification campaigns by Jewish extremists,"
and suggested their only purpose in raising the issue was to "prevent
Palestinians from achieving our freedom."
Nusseibeh is often described as a Palestinian
"moderate." But in a culture as poisoned with vitriolic anti-Semitism
as the Palestinian Authority, moderation doesn't go very far. It doesn't even
go as far as repudiating the Nazi-like salutes and tableaux of dead Israelis
during a public rally on an East Jerusalem college campus. Not even to retain
the goodwill of an institution as dovish and liberal as Brandeis, a
Jewish-sponsored university that was proud of its relationship with Al-Quds.
The genocidal values of Islamic Jihad are no anomaly.
They are the values of Hamas and the PLO.
They are the values that led the Arab League to spurn the
UN's proposed two-state solution in 1947, and to announce that it would crush
the newborn Jewish state in "a war of extermination and a momentous
massacre." They are the values that induced Haj Amin al-Husseini, the
Grand Mufti of Jerusalem and the leader of the Palestinians in the 1930s, to
form an alliance with Adolf Hitler, eagerly collaborating with the führer in
the hope of importing the Final Solution to the Jews of the Middle East.
"Our fundamental condition for cooperating with
Germany," Husseini wrote in his journal, "was a free hand to
eradicate every last Jew from Palestine and the Arab world." He asked
Hitler "for an explicit undertaking to allow us to solve the Jewish
problem … according to the scientific methods innovated by Germany in the
handling of its Jews."
There may have been no actual swastikas at the Islamic
Jihad rally, but the lethal values represented by the swastika have been a part
of the Palestinian national movement for the better part of a century. They
still are, however much people of goodwill might wish otherwise. So long as
even famous Palestinian "moderates" cannot bring themselves to
bravely defy those values, Palestinian sovereignty will remain a reckless
gamble — and peace as far off as ever.
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