July 25, 2009 1:00 AM
by Alan M. Dershowitz
Hamas, the terrorist organization that specializes in targeting civilians, has now decided, according to a New York Times headline, to shift “from rockets to culture war” in an effort to garner public support for its cause. Part of its ongoing public relations campaign is to portray the Israelis as the “new Nazis” and the Palestinians as the “new Jews.” In order to bring about this transformation, it must engage in a form of Holocaust denial that erases the historical record of widespread Palestinian complicity with the “old Nazis” in perpetrating the real Holocaust. It has become an important part of the mantra of Hamas supporters that neither the Palestinians people nor its leadership played any role in the Holocaust. Listen to Mohammad Ahmadinejad talking to students at
If [the Holocaust] is a reality, we need to still question whether the Palestinian people should be paying for it or not. After all, it happened in
The conclusion that is supposed to follow from this “fact” is that the establishment of
I hear this argument on university campuses around the
The truth is that the Palestinian leadership, supported by the Palestinian masses, played a significant role in Hitler’s Holocaust.
The official leader of the Palestinians, Haj Amin al-Husseini, spent the war years in
The mufti was apparently planning to return to
Not only did Husseini exhort his followers to murder the Jews; he also took an active role in trying to bring about that result. For example, in 1944, a German-Arab commando unit, under Husseini’s command, parachuted into
Husseini also helped to inspire a pro-Nazi coup in
The Mufti: “The Arabs were
Hitler: “
Hitler assured Husseini about how he would be regarded following a Nazi victory and “the destruction of the Jewish element residing in the Arab sphere.” In that hour, the mufti would be the most authoritative spokesman for the Arab world. It would then be his task to set off the Arab operations that he had secretly prepared.
Husseini’s significant contributions to the Holocaust were multifold: first, he pleaded with Hitler to exterminate European Jewry and advised the Nazis on how to do so; second, he visited Auschwitz and urged Eichmann and Himmler to accelerate the pace of the mass murder; third, he personally stopped 4,000 children, accompanied by 500 adults, from leaving Europe and had them sent to Auschwitz and gassed; fourth, he prevented another two thousand Jews from leaving Romania for Palestine and one thousand from leaving Hungary for Palestine, who were subsequently sent to death camps; fifth, he organized the killing of 12,600 Bosnian Jews by Muslims, whom he recruited to the Waffen-SS Nazi-Bosnian division. He was also one of the few non-Germans who was made privy to the Nazi extermination while it was taking place. It was in his official capacity as the leader of the Palestinian people and its official representative that he made his pact with Hitler, spent the war years in Berlin, and worked actively with Eichmann, Himmler, von Ribbentrop, and Hitler himself to “accelerate” the final solution by exterminating the Jews of Europe and laying plans to exterminate the Jews of Palestine.
Not only did the Grand Mufti play a significant role in the murder of European Jewry, he sought to replicate the genocide against the Jews in
It is also fair to say that Husseini’s pro-Nazi sympathies and support were widespread among his Palestinian followers, who regarded him as a hero even after the war and the disclosure of his role in Nazi atrocities. The notorious photograph of Husseini and Hitler, together in
Husseini is still regarded by many as “the George Washington” of the Palestinian people, and if the Palestinians were to get a state of their own, he would be honored as our founding father is. He was their hero, despite—more likely, because of—his active role in the genocide against the Jewish people, which he openly supported and assisted. According to Husseini’s biographer, “Large parts of the Arab world shared [Husseini’s] sympathy with Nazi Germany during the Second World War . Haj Amin’s popularity among the Palestinian Arabs and within the Arab states actually increased more than ever during his period with the Nazis.”
In 1948, the National Palestinian Council elected Husseini as its president, even though he was a wanted war criminal living in exile in
It is a myth, therefore—another myth perpetrated by Iran’s mythmaker-in-chief as well as by Hamas and by many on the hard left who seek to demonize Israel—that the Palestinians played “no role” in the Holocaust. Considering the active support by the Palestinian leadership and masses for the losing side of a genocidal war, it was more than fair for the United Nations to offer them a state of their own on more than half of the arable land of the British mandate.
The Palestinians rejected that offer and several since because they wanted there not to be a Jewish state more than they wanted their own state. That was Husseini’s position. Hamas still takes that position. Perhaps their new “culture war” will finally cause them to reconsider—and to accept the two state solution.
The esteemed Prof. Dershowitz has overlooked perhaps an even more significant aspect of Palestinian Arab complicity in the Holocaust: the fact that their violent opposition to the notion of a Jewish National Home (especially during the period 1936-9) gave Britain the excuse she needed to shut the gates of Palestine to Jewish immigrants from Europe throughout the entire course of WW2 and the Holocaust.
The article is exactly right. The problem is in assigning the blame of the vicious actions of the mufti et al. to the entire Palestinian people. The same is true for the broader Arab world.
I do not know what the solution is to this problem of placing responsibility for the actions of a leadership, albeit popular, upon an entire people, but it is a problem. This is what was done historically by Christians to Jews in reaction to the horrible injustices heaped upon Jesus Christ by the Chief Priests, the Scribes and the Pharisees, the leaders of the Jewish people at the beginning of the common era, at the beginning of the Great Schism between Christians and Jews. Needless to say, that reaction had unspeakably tragic consequences for both parties.
Thank you, Professor Dershowitz for an enlightening article about the past that I wasn't aware of (though my Israeli husband knew all about that Mufti). I have to tell you that I was e-mailed your article by a friend in Curacao, NWI. Had she not forwarded it to me, I doubt whether I would have seen it and whether I would have been able to forward it to all my email correspondants. I feel badly that this article - and probably others that you've written which I haven't seen, - does not have a wider distribution! It should be read by all Americans. I'm sure many have no idea about the historic precedents for the Hamas hatred of the Jews.
Sincerely,
Dr.Gloria Berens
Prof. Dershowitz has taken Prof. Gil-White's research without giving the appropriate credit and draws the most absurd conclusion from the very facts he tells here: how can he defend the two-state (non)solution if the Palestinian Arab leadership - both Fatah and Hamas - has never ceased to be fascistic? Any attentive reader will understand that it is nonsensical to defend the creation of a Palestinian state whose leaders' sole aim is the destruction of Israel and the eradication of Arab Christianity.
interesting and informative information not widely known. should be more widely circulated.