NOVANEWS
|
One of the American Jewish community’s most visible proponents of Muslim-Jewishdialogue has announced that he would like to organize a Holocaust memorial ceremonynext year in the Palestinian Authority capital of Ramallah. It is an “existential challengenow to identify Muslim leaders that will stand with us shoulder to shoulder that will standup for the Jewish community and will defend the Jewish community and I am telling youthose leaders exist,” Rabbi Marc Schneier, president of the New York-based Foundation forEthnic Understanding told The Jerusalem Post. As part of that effort he stated that he is“working on some very significant events to take place within Muslim countries” onInternational Holocaust Remembrance Day 2015, which falls on January 27. While holdingcommemorations in Jewish communities is important, it is also “preaching to theconverted” and given that Holocaust denial is a problem in the Muslim world it issupremely important to hold “significant commemorations that will take place in thecapitals of Muslim countries.” Asked where he would like to organize such events,Schneier cited Indonesia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and the Palestinian Authority.“I would love to do it in Ramallah to see if [Palestinian Authority] President Abbaswould follow up” on his 2014 condemnation of the Holocaust, Schneier said. “To bring itto Ramallah and to have some commemoration there and this would be a follow-up to mymeeting with President Abbas.” In a meeting with Schneier last year, the PA leader calledthe Nazi genocide the “single greatest tragedy in modern-day history” and, according tothe rabbi, agreed to make a public declaration on behalf of Holocaust-remembranceefforts around the world. Abbas has been a subject of criticism in some Israeli circles overaccusations of Holocaust denial because of his graduate thesis, written while studying inthe former Soviet Union, which asserted that “a partnership was established betweenHitler’s Nazis and the leadership of the Zionist movement” and that the Zionist movement“gave permission to every racist in the world, led by Hitler and the Nazis, to treat Jews asthey wish, so long as it guarantees immigration to Palestine.” In 2013 Abbas defended histhesis, saying that he “challenges anyone who can deny that the Zionist movement hadties with the Nazis before World War II,” according to a report in the Palestinian newsservice Ma’an. The Palestinian Authority has been accused of distorting the Holocaust inthe past. In 2011, a PA-sponsored youth magazine ran a feature in which Hitler tells aPalestinian girl that he “killed them [the Jews] so you would all know that they are anation which spreads destruction all over the world.” Israel has been accused of the“exaggeration of the story of the Holocaust” by Palestinian news outlets such as theofficial PA newspaper Al-Hayat al-Jadida. According to a poll released by the Anti-Defamation League last May, Palestinian anti-Semitism is “pervasive throughout society,”with 93 percent of respondents affirming anti-Jewish stereotypes, making the PalestinianAuthority the most anti-Semitic territory on earth. Sixty four percent of people polled inJudea, Samaria and Gaza affirmed that “Jews still talk too much about what happened tothem in the Holocaust” while 84% asserted that “Jews don’t care what happens to anyonebut their own kind.” Abbas’s office said they have no information on this issue and have notreceived any request. |