
Muslims and Anti-Semitism
By Tariq Ramadan
The responsibility of the
Muslims and the Jews in the West
is tremendous: living together,
both citizens of the same
countries, they should raise
their voices in the name of
justice and mutual respect. In
France, for example, one finds a
unique situation; namely, the
largest Jewish and Muslim
communities in Europe living
together. In America, we find
the same situation with two
important religious communities
sharing the same citizenship.
That itself should be an ideal
opportunity for people to learn
to live in harmony. However, the
reality is that problems are on
the rise. While tensions have
been incidental in the past, the
situation has been exacerbated
during the second intifada, and
more recently, during the
upsurge of violence in the
Middle East. The trend appears
to be that the Muslim immigrants
as well as native European and
American Muslims are becoming
extremely sensitive to the
events occurring in Palestine
and are demonstrating their
frustration quite overtly.
Malicious words, cries of "down
with the Jews" shouted during
protest demonstrations, and in a
few cities in France, reports of
synagogues being vandalized. One
also hears ambiguous statements
about Jews, their “occult-like”
power, their insidious role
within the media and their
nefarious plans. After September
11th, the false rumor that 4,000
Jews did not show up for work
the morning of the terrorist
attacks against the World Trade
center, was relayed throughout
predominantly Muslim areas.
It is very rare to hear Muslim
voices that set themselves apart
from this kind of discourse and
attitude. Often, one will try to
explain away this phenomena
being a result of extreme
frustration and humiliation.
That may be true, but one must
be honest and analyze the
situation deeply. Much like the
situation across the Muslim
world, there exists in the West
today a discourse which is
anti-Semitic, seeking legitimacy
in certain Islamic texts and
support in the present situation
in Palestine. This is the
attitude of not only
marginalized youth, but also of
intellectuals and Imams, who see
the manipulative hand of the
"Jewish lobby” at each turn or
every political setback,
The situation is far too serious
for one to be satisfied by
simple explanations based on
current frustrations. In the
name of their faith and their
conscience, Muslims must take a
clear position so that a
pernicious atmosphere does not
take hold in the Western
countries. Nothing in Islam can
legitimize xenophobia or the
rejection of a human being due
to his/her religious creed or
ethnicity. One must say
unequivocally, with force, that
anti-Semitism is unacceptable
and indefensible. The message of
Islam requires respect of Jewish
faith and spirituality as noble
expressions of "The People of
the Book".
During the initial phase of the
Prophet’s settlement in Medina,
prior to the conflicts of
Alliances, the Prophet Muhammad
sternly admonished: "He who is
unjust with a contractor
(Christians and Jews of Medina),
I shall bear witness against him
on the Day of Judgment". Later,
during a period of extreme
conflict [between Jews and
Muslims], eight Qur’anic verses
were revealed to absolve a Jew
who had falsely been accused of
a crime by a Muslim. Mohamed
constantly taught respect for
all human beings, with all their
differences. One day, he stood
up out of respect when he saw a
funeral procession nearby. When
told it was that of a Jew, he
replied "Is it not human soul?"
One cannot simultaneously
neglect these teachings and
continue to feed a tainted
portrayal concerning Jews. It is
the responsibility of Islamic
organizations and Imams to send
an unambiguous message about the
profound link between Islam and
Judaism; the recognition of
Moses and the Torah as part of
Islamic teachings; on the
necessary contextualisation of
certain equivocal texts within
the Qu’ran; on mutual respect
and the rejection of all forms
of explicit or implicit
anti-Semitism. This also means
to acknowledge the horrors of
the holocaust, by studying its
ramifications, and respecting
the pain and suffering which
have shaped the Jewish
conscience in the 20th century.
In order for all Muslim citizens
to understand this teaching,
there must be a corresponding
set of actions. One has to fight
feelings of victimization which
colonize the spirit of many
Muslim citizens in the West,
especially those who are the
most marginalized. The
frustration within these
communities leads to blaming of
the other, the state, the
police, and, "the Jew who does
not like us and who manipulates
us..."
It is here that Muslim
intellectuals and the public
authority should share the
responsibility. The first step
is to disseminate an Islamic
awareness that is coherent and
non-literal. It should emphasize
personal responsibility and
respect of others. As for public
authorities, it is important
that they encourage concrete
actions which break the cycle of
economic ghettos and encourage
reform of social and urban
politics at a local level.
Whether we like it or not,
unemployment and discrimination
are one of the major roots of
racism.
At another level, there is
urgency for Jewish and Muslim
representatives to start
communicating and establish an
honest dialogue in order to
avoid knee-jerk, reflexive
community responses that may
undermine the principle of
living together in harmony.
Self-criticism must become a
mutual exercise.
If it is necessary to condemn
anti-Semitic language of some
Muslims, it is also the
responsibility of Jewish
intellectuals, religious or
secular, not to confuse the
different spheres. An extreme
right-wing Prime Minister,
Jewish or otherwise, supports an
ideology that must be denounced
precisely for what it is.
Criticism of Sharon for his
atrocious past crimes and his
current policy is not a sign of
disrespect for Judaism, in the
same way that criticism of
dictators of some Muslim
countries, one by one, is not an
attack on Islam.
The respect that we have towards
Judaism should not be subject to
suspicion once we denounce the
unjust policies of the state of
Israel. To foster this type of
amalgams, we will end up
creating chasms between
communities and that is
certainly to empty the ethical
content of our common Western
citizenship based on the values
of justice and equality.
Muslims and Jews alike should
stop feeding sentiments of
victimization, and reconsider
the discourse that one is
creating towards the other. In
the name of a common ethics of
citizenship, our dignity will be
based upon our ability to know
how to be critical, transcending
one’s creed, a state, or an
organization without considering
that it “clearly” a
manifestation of anti Semitism
or Islamophobia. It is exactly
this type of intellectual
requirement which one must teach
and which will help all Jews and
Muslims to offer to their faith,
and to their respective
belonging, the magnitude of a
self-conscience based on
universal principals, and not a
closed-minded ghetto identity.
In Europe and in America, the
conditions are right to bring
these challenges to light. What
remains is the mutual commitment
to a constructive self-analysis
and to refuse the destructive
temptation of selective
condemnations.