Jewish World Review August
18, 2006 / 24 Menachem-Av, 5766
The Jews everywhere are "the Muslim's bitter enemies," said a prominent
Islamic leader. Throughout history, the "irreconcilable enemy of Islam"
has conspired and schemed and "oppressed and persecuted 40 million Muslims,"
he said. In Palestine, the Jews are establishing "a base from which to
extend their power over neighboring Islamic countries." And, he proclaimed,
"this war, which was unleashed by the world Jewry," provided "Muslims the
best opportunity to free themselves from these instances of persecution
and oppression."
Sound like Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah? Or perhaps Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad? Nope. It was the grand mufti of Jerusalem,
Haj Amin al-Husseini, in 1942. An ardent Nazi supporter, al-Husseini delivered
his speech at the opening of the Islamic Institute in Berlin, one day after
the Allies denounced the Nazis for "carrying into effect Hitler's oft-repeated
intention to exterminate the Jewish people in Europe." Al-Husseini's address
was approved by Nazi Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop, and Joseph
Goebbels was in attendance. The Reich press office widely distributed the
comments.
President Bush undoubtedly didn't have any of this in mind this week
when he dubbed our enemies in the war on terror "Islamic fascists." But
his comments — analytically flawed as they may be — added some much-needed
moral clarity to our current struggle. They also helped to illuminate a
much-overlooked point: Islamic fundamentalism and Nazism are historically
and intellectually linked. (When the Israelis caught Adolf Eichmann, an
architect of the Final Solution, a leading Saudi Arabian newspaper read:
"Arrest of Eichmann, who had the honor of killing 6 million Jews.") Perhaps
unsurprisingly, Bush's remarks seem to have struck a nerve.
The Saudi government warned "against hurling charges of terrorism and
fascism at Muslims without regard to the spotless history of Islamic civilization."
Of course, no civilization is without sin, but it takes particular chutzpah
for Saudis to preen, considering their civilization is as spotless as a
leopard.
Still, the point isn't to dredge up ancient history about Muslims and
Nazis. Many Swedes got along swimmingly with the Nazis, but who worries
about the Swedes today? The Muslim world is another matter. And unlike
the Swedes, the similarities between Nazism and Islamic fascism are not
all in the past. In what may be the most important book on the Holocaust
in a generation, historian Jeffrey Herf explains why.
According to the standard Holocaust narrative, the Final Solution was
the product of "hate" or racism or, often, both. Anti-Semitism became popular
in the 19th century; the Nazis expanded on it, constructing a pseudo-scientific
biological racism that saw the Jews as a "cancer" on the body politic and
the Holocaust as an attempt to excise the tumor. Herf does not so much
debunk this version of history as cut through it.
In "The Jewish Enemy: Nazi Propaganda During World War II and the Holocaust,"
he concedes that hatred and racism were important, but he argues that they
don't explain Germany's unique efforts to destroy the Jews. It's not as
if no one hated the Jews until the 1930s.
The real answer isn't hate, but fear. Poring through miles of speeches,
private comments, journal entries, party memoranda and all 24,000 pages
of Goebbels' diaries, Herf concludes that the Nazis really believed that
the Jews ran the world and wanted to destroy Germany. They believed that
Jews controlled not only the Bolsheviks to the east but the capitalists
to the west. President Franklin D. Roosevelt was a mere pawn of his Jewish
friends and advisors. The British Parliament, Goebbels wrote in one diary
entry, was "in reality a kind of Jewish stock exchange." The "Jewish-plutocratic
enemy" was everywhere, benefiting from, and responsible for, every piece
of bad news for Germany. In fact, the Nazis were sure that the Jews had
declared war on Germany first, giving them no choice but to respond to
the Jewish campaign to "exterminate the Germans." This paranoia led the
Nazis to believe that rounding up millions of Jews and gassing them was
an act of self-defense.
What is so frightening is how similar this is to the sounds from the
Middle East today. Ahmadinejad — dismissed by "sophisticated" academics
as a blowhard — calls the Holocaust a myth. Indeed, there is no Jewish
conspiracy theory too outlandish in the Muslim world. Huge numbers of Muslims
— even 45 percent of British Muslims — believe that the Jews were behind
9/11. Theories that the Mossad is behind every bad headline, from the Indonesian
tsunami to bad soccer performances, are common on the Arab street. According
to Herf, this is only the second time the world has seen this sort of radical
anti-Semitic paranoia. And, again, too many in the unspotless West are
saying, "they can't be serious."
© 2006 TMS
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