No, this wasn’t a pop chart. The Islamic Bank of Britain invited nominations from members of the public to determine Britain’s best-known and most influential Muslims.
The result was a who’s who of British society. The final list included journalists Yvonne Ridley and Rageh Omaar. Also on the list were some 8 MP’s (including 4 Peers of the House of Lords), the chairman of a football club, a senior naval officer and the partner of the London office of an international accounting firm.
I somehow doubt I’d make a similar Australian list, though there are plenty of well-known Australians who tick the “Muslim” box on their census forms.
Israel, too, has its influential Muslims. Among them is Ghaleb Majadele, the first Muslim to be elected to an Israeli cabinet. It seems that having people from minority Muslim communities in sensitive roles won’t lead to the sky falling down.
I’m sure similar and more impressive lists could be drawn up about Jews in Britain and Australia. Each year, BRW’s Top 100 list contains a large number of Jewish Australians who, through hard work and enterprise, have contributed to their own personal wealth and the economic health of the nation.
Yet for one visiting Israeli history professor, the world’s nations must shudder at the thought of reaching a “critical mass” of Muslims. In many respects, his views resemble those of anti-Semitic propagandists who warned of the dire consequences of Jews infiltrating the economic and political structures of Western nations.
Professor Raphael Israeli teaches Islamic and Chinese history at Jerusalem’s Hebrew University. He has also taught at universities across the world, including stints at ANU and the University of Melbourne. Professor Israeli is currently visiting our shores again, this time as a Scholar-in-Residence at the Shalom Institute, an institution that prides itself in providing “Engaging, Inclusive, Pluralistic Jewish Education”.
The Australian Jewish News on Thursday 15 February 2007 reported comments of Professor Israeli which provided some hints of his approach to pluralistic inclusive interfaith relations. He gave some advice on how the “war of words” was insufficient to oppose what he described as “this threat of Islam”.
You have to adopt some kind of preventative policy. In order not to get there, limit the immigration and therefore you keep them a marginal minority, which will be a nuisance, but cannot pose a threat to the demographic and security aspects of a country … And one of the big possibilities is Australia, so they will continue to come legally, or illegally, and settle here, and when they get to the rate of the 10 per cent like in France, then you will see life will become untenable.
At one point, Professor Israeli takes a cue from The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, claiming:
Then they control whole sections of the economy, there are areas in France where you cannot be elected to Parliament without the support of the Muslims and so on. And therefore, by increasing their numbers they start to have an impact on the social, economic, political and cultural nature of the country.
Professor Israeli concludes his conspiracy theory as follows:
Muslim populations, which are very often minorities, very often abuse that hospitality and use democracy, openness and tolerance to their benefit, to spread their faith and to intimidate their hosts, and very often, to impose their standards and values upon them.
Israeli told Fairfax newspapers that he had been misunderstood and misinterpreted. In fact, all he had suggested was that countries whose Muslim populations reached a “critical mass” would “have problems”, and that this was ...
... the general rule, so if it applies everywhere, it applies in Australia.Professor Israeli will be participating in a course entitled “Understanding Islam”. The Shalom Institute’s 2007 brochure of Courses, Events and Programs describes Professor Israeli’s sessions as introducing students to an Islam that ...
... has bequeathed to generations of believers a culture of jihad and violence which has led to the wave of terrorism in the modern world.The course book is Professor Israeli’s own book about suicide terrorism.
So a pluralistic and inclusive approach to Islamic studies is one that insists Islam has bequeathed little more to the world than violence and terrorism. Its instructor publicly states Muslims must be marginalised and that Australia should implement discriminatory immigration policies.
So nothing about Islamic art or architecture, nor about how Jewish religion and culture flourished under Spanish and Ottoman Muslim rule. Nothing about how Maimonides, the Jewish scholar and physician known as the “second Moses”, wrote virtually all his work in Arabic before being selected as personal physician and senior adviser to the Kurdish general Saladdin who fought the crusaders.
Professor Israeli was born in Morocco. I doubt his course will mention the work of fellow Moroccan Andre Azoulay, Senior Advisor to the Moroccan King. Azoulay is a board member of the Alliance of Civilisations Project established by the United Nations to build bridges between Muslim-majority states and the nominally Christian West. He also happens to be Jewish.
In a 2004 article entitled Islam’s Sway Over Turkey, Israeli castigated the
... inexplicable Western policy of appeasement towards Islam ...
which he claimed was
... predicated upon the false assumption ...
... that there was such a thing as moderate or pragmatic Islam. Israeli went onto castigate US and Western opposition to the genocide of Bosnian and Albanian Muslims in the Balkans.
I’m not sure whether Israeli expressed his views at the height of the Bosnian conflict. Certainly his words would have troubled Bosnia’s Ambassador to the United States, Sven Alkalaj, handpicked by Bosnia’s then-President and devoutly Muslim lawyer Alija Izatbegovic. Alkalaj’s Jewish heritage was of little consequence to Izetbegovic’s decision.
I believe that the views of Professor Israeli do not represent mainstream Israeli and Jewish opinion. I’d like to think that the views of people like Israeli, Daniel Pipes, Sharon Lapkin, Melanie Phillips, Mark Steyn (who, by the way, regards himself as a Christian) and others of this far-Right ilk, are not reflective of what most Western Jews think of Muslims.
I hope I’m not wrong.
Words © 2007 Irfan Yusuf
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France is f#@ked because of muslims.
ReplyDeleteViolence and terror all round. Mistrust and terror under every burqua.
Muslims Out!
It's great that the Islamic Bank of Britain has run a survey to find the Best Known and Most Influential Muslims. They can run one here if they want: 'Australia's Best Known and Most Influential Muslims and The First 100 Muslims to be dragged out of the queque at Lakemba Centrelink and be deported back to the muslim shitholes they came from'
ReplyDeleteWhen islamists impress themselves on the world by deliberate bombing campaigns against Westerners and say it is for Islam;when Islamic youth in France make 751 areas "no-go" zones; when Muslims in Egypt are assaulting and kidnapping Christian girls; when various groups too numerous to mention declare they want Sharia law(including 60% of British Muslims);when Saudi-funded madrasas push Islamic jihad; when documentaries like Dispatches show what happens in the mospques - and this is a timy part of what is happening, then everyone is entitled to look askance at Islam, because death seems to be awfully common in its plans for others.
ReplyDeleteAs for the Golden Age for Jews under Islam, it didn't stop Islamically-sanctioned destruction of synagogues in Spain. iaslam in fact has a history (which continues today) of destroying and building over other religions' holy places.
Just practice your own non-violent Islam, Irfan, and stop making excuses for killers.
Anon @ 9:13am, can you name me one nominally Muslim ruler who systematically massacred 6 million Jews?
ReplyDeleteAlso, are you suggesting that Muslim nations are totally characterised by mistreatment of minorities? Is that all that goes on in these countries?
I'm not defending what wacky govts or peoples from nominally Muslim countries do. But seriously, your reasoning about these nations mirrors the reasoning (or lack thereof) of people like bin-Ladin when they harp on about the "Christian" West.