By David Harsanyi
Thursday, October 22, 2015
The other day, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
claimed Adolf Hitler only had plans to expel Jews from Europe until his
infamous meeting with the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin al-Husseini, who
instructed him to “burn them.”
You can imagine what happened next.
It was interesting watching some of the most stridently
anti-Israel pundits—people who typically justify or ignore the stream of
Holocaust-denying and Jew-hating that oozes from the Muslim world—pretending to
be most insulted by this supposed cheapening of the memory of Holocaust. Others
compared Netanyahu to a Holocaust denier. What really offended them, of course,
was that someone had pointed out that intellectual and spiritual founder of
Palestinian independence was an active Nazi. That is a fact that might be
overlooked.
Now, it should be said that there’s zero historic
evidence that Hitler’s conversation with al-Husseini instigated any change in
Nazi plans for the Jews. Netanyahu should not have claimed otherwise. But it
was a big speech, and Netanyahu’s larger point, as he later clarified, was just
as important:
But this is
what Haj Amin al-Husseini said. He said, ‘The Jews seek to destroy the Temple
Mount.’ My grandfather in 1920 seeks to destroy…? Sorry, the al-Aqsa Mosque. So
this lie is about a hundred years old. It fomented many, many attacks. The
Temple Mount stands. The al-Aqsa Mosque stands. But the lie stands too,
persists.
Netanyahu makes a case that much of the paranoia about
Jews in the Middle East is not new. Long before any “occupation,” Husseini
supported the Holocaust and had a desire to import Nazi tactics to the Middle
East. In an effort to inflame violence and anti-Semitism, Arabs had, as they’re
doing today, spread false rumors about the intention of Jews to occupy or expel
Muslims from holy sites. This is what
Haj Amin al-Husseini did. This is what Yasser Arafat did. This is what Fatah is
doing today, as Palestinians continue to stab Jewish civilians in another spasm
of irrationally murderous and self-destructive behavior.
Before Israel ever existed, much less retook East
Jerusalem, the mufti helped to personally engineer or incited massacres of Jews
in 1920, 1929, and 1936. The Hebron massacre in 1929 saw 70 Jewish civilians
killed, many of them students and teachers, after the mufti (like Fatah does
today) spread rumors about Jews taking control of the Temple Mount.
It’s also worth noting that today the only people not
allowed to openly pray at their holiest site in Jerusalem are the Jews. Israel
protects holy sites of all faiths. Meanwhile, Joseph’s Tomb is being desecrated
by a mob of Palestinians, which is apparently less newsworthy.
Husseini also directly participated in war on Jews during
World War II. As a guest of Hitler, after a failed coup in Iraq, he helped
recruit thousands of Muslims to join a division of the Waffen-SS—who then
played an active role in the destruction of Yugoslavian Jewry. On Berlin radio,
the mufti speeches would include lines like: “Kill the Jews wherever you find
them—this pleases God, history and religion.” He personally, with the backing
of Himmler, Eichmann, and others, intervened to stop the issuing of at least
400,000 visas to Jews trying to emigrate to British Palestine. Most of those
people ended up in concentration camps.
In 1943, after hearing that some Germany allies were
negotiating with the International Red Cross and others to transport thousands
of Jewish children to Palestine to avoid death, he lobbied to prevent the
rescue, pushing to have them sent to Poland to perish. Husseini was accused of
war crimes by the Nuremberg tribunal. He escaped prosecution.
In Howard Sachar’s “A History of Israel: From the Rise of
Zionism to our Time,” the author contends that al-Husseini wasn’t only
effective in helping hasten the blood-soaked modern thinking that has infected
the Arab world (to be fair, if it wasn’t him, it would probably have been
someone else), but that he added another ingredient that would later make the
conflict even more combustible: religious xenophobia.
“Unlike earlier Arab spokesmen,” writes Sachar, “the
Mufti had no illusions that the British would cooperate in the suppression of
the Jewish National Home. He taught his followers to regard the mandatory as an
infidel tyranny in alliance with other, Jewish, non- believers.”
Today, Palestinian groups utilize comparable tactics and
language to perpetrate their own violence. Justifications for those acts are
churned out by the far Left and Right here and in Europe, and Husseini is still
revered by Palestinian leaders. In the book “Icon of Evil: Hitler’s Mufti and
the Rise of Radical Islam,” David Dalin and John Rothmann document in detail
that Husseini is considered the “George Washington” of the Palestinian people.
Should we be offended?
It is somewhat ironic that so many Palestinians deny the
Holocaust when one of their founding fathers was intimately part of that ugly
history. Netanyahu clarified his statement. But Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas’s 1982 dissertation, “The Other Side: the Secret Relationship Between
Nazism and Zionism” is one part Holocaust denialism and one part conspiracy
theory, claiming that Zionists collaborated with Nazis as a way to spur Jewish
immigration to British Palestine. Shouldn’t we be offended?
But back to Netanyahu. It’s completely plausible that the
mufti would have asked Hitler to “burn them,” though it’s doubtful the Fuhrer
would have cared very much what the mufti had to say or that he needed much
prodding. But the two certainly shared a similar attitude towards the Jews. Yet
we’re supposed to believe Netanyahu views Hitler as a “moderate,” as Glenn
Greenwald preposterously claims? And Israel’s sins are never to be forgotten.
Surely pointing out that Arab leadership played an active role in the
Holocaust, and that its leadership today still venerates the man who led the
charge, is worthwhile too.
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