Opposition to Israel is an offense against Allah.

Similar documents
Large and Growing Numbers of Muslims Reject Terrorism, Bin Laden

Everyone, our law enforcement, our political leaders, everyone, needs to hear this message. We need to know the steps someone goes through to become a

Grade yourself on the OER. Test Friday on Unit 1

True Islam vs Pseudo Islam

The Mediterranean Israeli Identity

Institute on Religion and Public Policy. Report on Religious Freedom in Egypt

Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Center for Special Studies (C.S.S.)

Significant Person. Sayyid Qutb. Significant Person Sayyid Qutb

Religion and Global Modernity

Sacred Spaces Rev. Bruce Taylor September 26, 2010

Saturday, September 21, 13. Since Ancient Times

Creation of Israel. Essential Question: What are the key factors that led to the creation of the modern state of Israel?

Carleton University Learning in Retirement Program (Oct-Dec 2017) Israel/Palestine: Will it ever end? Welcome. Peter Larson

Introduction to Islam, SW Asia & North Africa

Senior Palestinian figures, including clerics, call for boycotting the municipal elections in Jerusalem. Overview

Egypt s Sufi Al-Azmiyya: An Alternative to Salafism?

A Critique on Spencer s Muhammad. This paper will critique Robert Spencer s The Truth about Muhammad: Founder of the


Al- Mustafa Islamic Centre Ireland

2-Provide an example of an ethnic clash we have discussed in World Cultures: 3-Fill in the chart below, using the reading and the map.

Changing Borders. UN s 1947 Palestine Partition Plan After the 1949 War After the Six-Day War 1967

HUMAN GEOGRAPHY. By Brett Lucas

Religion and Society in Israel (REL 3672/RLG5613)

IRMO BRIE F IRMO. Main Strategic Considerations of Contemporary Israel. By Yossi Peled. Introduction

Islam in other Nations

الكنيسة اإلنجيلية اللوثرية في األردن واألراضي المقدسة The Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land

The Islamic Community and the Wahabi fire

ESAM [Economic and Social Resource Center] 26 th Congress of International Union of Muslim Communities Global Crises, Islamic World and the West"

Arabs and Muslims Will Not Accept Israel as the Jewish State

Egypt s Fateful Verdict

Interview with the Ambassador of Palestine in Athens, Marwan Emile Toubassi

The Struggle on Egypt's New Constitution - The Danger of an Islamic Sharia State

Exploring Concepts of Liberty in Islam

A new religious state model in the case of "Islamic State" O Muslims, come to your state. Yes, your state! Come! Syria is not for

22.2 THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN. Birthplace of three major world religions Jerusalem:

A Christian Response to Islamic Extremism Romans 12: /24/2016

instrumentalize this idea for the suppression of women or to compel them to wear a veil in order to frighten them, so they will not use makeup or

Israeli-Palestinian Arab Conflict

Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Center for Special Studies (C.S.S)

Religious Pluralism in the Palestinian Territories

just past and to let its experiences influence our immediate future. This is no less so for the

Struggle between extreme and moderate Islam

June 2018 History, people and hope in the Middle East. Philip Woods, Area Coordinator, Middle East and Europe Presbyterian World Mission

Israel No More "The Only Democracy in the Middle East"

In Ireland, Israel s Religious Right Engages with Ideas for Peace

The Muslim Brotherhood s Global Threat. Dr. Hillel Fradkin. Hudson Institute. Testimony Prepared For

Regional Issues. Conflicts in the Middle East. Importance of Oil. Growth of Islamism. Oil as source of conflict in Middle East

Arab-Israeli conflict

Task: Topic: Type: Length: Formatting: Requirements:

Issue Overview: Jihad

THE GERMAN CONFERENCE ON ISLAM

Palestine and the Mideast Crisis. Israel was founded as a Jewish state in 1948, but many Palestinian Arabs refused to recognize it.

Muhammad Sawalha, senior Hamas operative living in London, continues participating in Hamas-supported political activities.

A MILE WIDE AND AN INCH DEEP

Abstract: Constitutional Perception within Israel Jenine Saleh

«Problems in the Islamic world cannot be blamed exclusively on Islam»

Islam and Religion in the Middle East

How To Win A Cosmic War: God, Globalization, And The End Of The War On Terror PDF

Islam and Christianity Intersections Class - Spring 2017

Overview. Iran is keeping a low profile with regards to the Northern Shield operation carried

Event A: The Decline of the Ottoman Empire

Jerusalem-Hebron Religious Leaders Forum An interfaith encounter project in Israel part-funded by IARF

Europe and American Identity H1007

MULTICULTURALISM AND FUNDAMENTALISM. Multiculturalism

Islam & We. University of Iowa. Nadia Abduljabbar. International Writing Program Archive of Residents' Work Panel: Islam and We

Anti-Zionism in the courts is not kosher law

MA in Israel Studies. Faculty of Humanities School of History Department of Israel Studies Department of Jewish History

Islam for Christians. John W. Herbst, PhD

Successes and failures of the Pan-Arabism

THE CHALLENGE OF CHRISTIANITY

Living by Separate Laws: Halachah, Sharia and America Shabbat Chukkat 5777

Please note I ve made some minor changes to his English to make it a smoother read KATANA]

ISLAM Festivities Ending Ramadan Microsoft Encarta 2006.

The Palestinian-Israeli Pulse: A Joint Poll

Giving Peace a Chance in the Middle East

Monday, March 07, 2005 [Posted by Professor Juan Cole on his popular blog Informed Comment ] Foreign Occupation has Produced Radical Muslim Terrorism

Professor Shibley Telhami,, Principal Investigator

INTRODUCTION TO ISLAM. Open to All - No previous knowledge required

MINDS ON ACTIVITY SETTING THE STAGE. News in Review January 2013 Teacher Resource Guide EIGHT DAYS: Israel and Hamas

Jews and Anti-Judaism in Esther and the Church

COUNTERFEIT ISRAEL A DANGEROUS PROPHETIC ILLUSION

Forum on Public Policy

Looking for the Blessed Hope

Speech by Michel Touma, Lebanese journalist, at the symposium on Religion and Human Rights - Utah - October 2013.

II. From civil war to regional confrontation

The Roots of Terrorism in Europe. Copenhagen 2-3 May 2005 S U M M A R Y

If one looks into the history of the word Semite, it references a language group and no more. The Semitic languages are:

Jihadist Strategies in the War on Terrorism

What is Islam? Second largest religion in the world. 1.2 Billion Muslims (20% of earth population) Based on beliefs on Jews & Christians

HISTORY OF THE PALESTINIAN-ISRAELI CONFLICT

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, vs. RICHARD COLVIN REID, a/k/a ABDUL-RAHEEM, a/k/a ABDUL RAHEEM, ABU IBRAHIM

The Islamic Case for Religious Liberty Abdullah Saeed First Things, November 2011

N. Africa & S.W. Asia. Chapter #8, Section #2

Who but the Enemy of the American People? Arnie Rosner A sovereign American. A Californian and NOT a U.S. Citizen

THE VIEW FROM NOWHERE. A sermon preached by Galen Guengerich All Souls Unitarian Church, New York City March 29, 2015

CUFI BRIEFING HISTORY - IDEOLOGY - TERROR

Emily Rappaport, Yael Bartana on Israel, the Myths Underlying Nation States, and Being a Political Artist, Artsy, September 2015.

REPORT ON A SEMINAR REGARDING ARAB/ISLAMIC PERCEPTIONS OF THE INFORMATION CAMPAIGN

Shaikh Muqbil bin Haadi ee Interview with Hassan al-zayidi of The Yemen Times

Arabian Sea. National boundary National capital Other city. ~ Area occupied by ~ Israel since 1967 _ Palestinian selt-rule

Transcription:

The Zionist Imam Photo by: Courtesy By SVEN BEHRISCH 07/19/2010 17:29 Opposition to Israel is an offense against Allah. What should one think about a Muslim Imam who encourages Israeli settlers to go on building? A leader of Italian Muslims who doubts the Palestinians right to any part of Israel? A pupil of the Grand Mufti of Cairo who declares that the Qur an itself grants the whole Land of Israel to the Jews, so that any opposition to the Jewish state is an offense against Allah? Surprisingly, Sheikh Abdul Hadi Palazzi, 49, is not on any Islamist hit list. He speaks to Fatah officials and is invited by scholars in the moderate Muslim world. He is convinced that as long as Muslims do not accept Israel, Islam will grow increasingly fundamentalist. Only a correctly interpreteted Qur an can ensure peace for Israel, and only a peaceful Israel can salvage Islam. Sheikh Palazzi was brought up as a secular Muslim in Italy. His Christian father converted to Islam, but lived a liberal Muslim life. His Syrian mother was a born Muslim. Palazzi went to study philosophy at La Sapienza University in Rome; religion was not a big issue for him then. He was interested in Plato and Aristotle, the philosophers who laid the foundations of a liberal and tolerant society. Palazzi went on to ask himself: What does my religion say about political ethics? He moved to Cairo and became a pupil of Muhammad al-mutawali as- Sha rawi, then the Mufti of Egypt, who advised president Anwar al-sadat to start peace negotiations with Israel. Sadat in Palazzi s eyes is a martyr, a hero in the fight for a moderate and peaceful Islam. Palazzi decided he wanted to change things. He started by changing his name. Massimo became Abdul Hadi Palazzi. It stands for democratic rights and the peaceful blessings of the Qur an. This was a time of religious change. Islam, according to Palazzi, had been taken over by the Wahabi, the fundamentalist Muslim brotherhoods that were (and still are) supported by the Saudi princes. Every year, says Palazzi, the Saudis put millions of dollars in the pockets of those radical

brotherhoods for an extremist struggle in the guise of Islam. The influence of Wahabism on the contemporary Arab world is such that many Arab Muslims are wrongly convinced that in order to be a good Muslim one must hate Israel. But this, according to Palazzi, is a new phenomenon. When you look at when Israel was forming, the process was not considered contrary to Islam. Originally there was a secular opposition. It turned into a religious conflict because those opposing a state of Israel knew their position was stronger when fortified with religion. During his research on the origins of Islamic extremism he found that those who oppose Wahabism are actually in favor of Israel. This was the insight that triggered his mission: Promote Israel in order to promote true Islam. Sheikh Palazzi refers to himself as a Muslim Zionist. Zionism to him means any contribution to support the state of Israel. He says Israel should exert sovereignity over the whole land of Palestine, including the West Bank. He explains that this position, which meets opposition from all Arab countries, the United Nations and even the majority of Israelis, is clearly supported in the Qur an. In Sura 5:21 Moses, who is also a Muslim prophet, invites the children of Israel: My people! Enter the Holy Land which Allah has ordained for you. Do not turn back in your tracks and so become transformed into losers. In Sura 2, Allah affirms the Jews right to rule over the place, and in the same Sura, according to a Zionist reading, Allah even grants them the right to fight for their state with physical force. Might it be that if fighting is prescribed for you [the children of Israel], you will not fight? Muhammad Abu-Laylah, co-editor of the London Journal of Qur anic Studies and professor of Islamic Studies in Al- Azhar University in Cairo, gets upset when he hears about Muslim Zionists. He gets even more upset when considering those passages being used to promote a favorable view of Israel. What kind of people are these? How can they be Muslims, betraying their brothers and sisters in Palestine? The Qur an, says Abu-Laylah, does not support Jews fighting Muslims. Allah granted Jews the right to live in the Holy Land, he concedes, but not to suppress the Palestinian people. This is ridiculous, he concludes.

Notwithstanding such accusations, Palazzi insists the Qur an calls on Jews to struggle against their enemies, even if they re Muslims. With regards to them he adds: In opposing the will of God and making war on Israel, Arabs are in effect making war on Allah Himself. Arabs in Palestine, Palazzi says, must not only understand this, but must also acknowledge that they are a minority. He gives an example of his own country. In the northern part of Italy we have a minority, the South- Tyrolians. They speak a German dialect and keep up their culture, yet are granted full Italian citizenship and share the same rights and duties as anyone else in the country. If they do not agree with Italian legislation, they are free to leave and go anywhere they like. A case even more similar to Israel, he says, was Spain. Spain was once controlled by Muslims. Now we have a secular government there that grants Spanish Muslims a good life. Why shouldn t this work in Israel, a democratic country? Palazzi is not the only Islamic scholar who openly speaks of Israel s right to exist, and condemns Islamic extremists. Not only has he followers among his Italian community, but many moderate Muslims share his goal of liberating Islam from the Wahabis by promoting Israel. They are important moderators in the intricate peace process, but do not go as far as to deny the Palesinians a right to their land. They do not, as Palazzi does, encourage Hebron settlers, many of whom openly advocate the expulsion of all Arabs from Palestine. In one speech he states it is a divine sign of Israel s superiority that the tiny country won every war against its enemies while they, though larger in size and population, were completely defeated. Above all, he is in favor of erecting the Third Temple on Jerusalem s Temple Mount. As someone who wants to deliver a message of peace, why does he risk closed doors even on the moderate Muslim-Arab side by flirting with fundamentalist Jewish groups and ideas that in many Israelis eyes do not serve the interests of the nation? Palazzi is unwilling to concede that he is a political radical. But if you want to make your views popular, you also have to exaggerate. As to his talks with militant settlers, he explains that my first visit to Israel was due to my interest in the country and its people; I didn t come to speak to anyone. But once I was there and got invited by Jewish groups and individuals, of course I didn t say no. He said he also spoke with Palestinian imams. In the past I was invited by a number of sheikhs to Palestine. They agreed with me on many issues and told me: We count on you to deliver our common message abroad. The majority of people in East Jerusalem and the territories are not permitted to speak overtly. Others claim to speak in their name. And how did they respond to his pro- Zionist interpretation of the Qur an? They were interested in my interpretation and listened. So what do Palestinian theologians say? I asked Mustafa Abu-Sway, professor of Islamic theology at Al Quds-University in Abu Dis, east of Jerusalem. Abu-Sway, like Palazzi, studied philosophy, but at Boston University, where he also taught for many years. Sway is an observant Muslim, but has been influenced by Western liberalism.

His wife is a professor of Islamic law. He was a member of the Muslim-Christian Council in Jerusalem, and is a frequent guest at international conferences on interreligious dialogue. Sway has met Palazzi on several occasions, both in Italy and Israel. He says Palazzi is a nice chap. Very educated. But completely wrong. I met Abu-Sway in the lobby of the American Colony Hotel in Jerusalem a place that refers to itself as an oasis where Jews and Arabs comfortably meet. Seated on an oriental-style divan, Sway talked about his opinion of Zionism. Zionism, he says, is an aggressive political agenda aimed at suppressing the Palestinian people. He is quick to add: We understand very well that there is a difference between Judaism and Zionism. This is not about Jewish presence. It s about an ideology of DNA-based superiority. Zionism knows two categories inferior humans, Palestinians, and superior humans, Jews, that rule the first. This is unacceptable according to both Islam and international human rights. Sway explains that every Muslim is free to interpret the Qur an in the way he thinks is correct. Everybody can do it Palazzi, me, even a child. Yet in order to be taken seriously among scholars one has to obey some rules of interpretation. One of them is coherence, another is not to apply contemporary concepts. Palazzi does both. Therefore, Sway says, Palazzi s reputation as a scholar is close to zero. His main mistake, continues Sway, is to attempt to legitimize Israel with passages from the Qur an. Not because it s Israel, but because the very concept of a state is a brainchild of the 19th century. How can anyone find proof in the Qur an for something that at the time of prophet Muhammed did not exist? Sway goes on: Palazzi does exactly the same thing he blames Islamic extremists for mingling religion with politics. It is as irresponsible to find religious arguments for Israeli policies of suppression as it is to use them to legitimize terror by radical Arabs. Sway concludes that any justification of politics by means of either the Qur an or the Bible is complete nonsense. Asked what he thinks are the reasons for Palazzi s mission, Sway shrugs. I don t know. But it seems he got on a track of self-hating Muslims, as did Salman Rushdie or Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who is affiliated with the most dubitable conservative interest groups in the US. Hirsi Ali, a women-rights activist from Somalia who fled to the United States after she was threatened for her comments about Islam in the Dutch Parliament, said about Muhammed that by Western standards, he was a pervert. Atyrant.

Yet Palazzi does not speak against Islam. On the contrary, he never tires of repeating its good message. This makes little difference to Sway, however. Anyway, he is not part of the official discourse, he says. The thing about official discourse on the interpretation of the Qur an is that this too is determined by a political agenda, notes Dina Lisnyansky, an expert on Islamic extremism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. At a coffee shop in a suburb of Tel Aviv, she argues that there is no such thing as an apolitical reading of the Qur an. When Sway says he doesn t mix politics with religion, he is wrong even if he may be not aware of it, she says. Muftis and professors who define the mainstream interpetation were appointed by politicians and surely the politicians wouldn t appoint anyone who is not in line with them. Perhaps Palazzi s rather peculiar interpretation is explainable partly by his very biography. Lisnyansky is writing her PhD-thesis on immigrants in Europe who became extremists. In contrast to many Imams in France or Great Britain, who were radicalized as a result of their failure to integrate in a different country, Palazzi created his own niche. Being born into an immigrant family, he combined the democratic rights of western Europe with a love for Islam, but added his Zionist mission. As a result, he is a radical too, but not on the radicals side. He is fighting everything that political Islam promotes. As such, Lisnyansky says, Palazzi remains a valuable player in the process of understanding between Jews and Muslims, Arabs and Israelis. One of the reasons why he is not on some black list in Iran is the fact that he, unlike Rushdie, has never said a negative word about Islam. To extremist interpreters of the Qur an he doesn t say you are wrong. He would only say: You got something wrong. His mission, therefore, is clearly not about reinventing Islam; it is about correcting the perspective. This article appeared in the July Christian edition of The Jerusalem Post.