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DAILY SHVITZ
Relationship Status for American Jews and Muslims: It's Complicated

This week, Reform Grand Rebbe Eric Yoffie spoke at the convention of the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA). In his speech, Yoffie deplored the "profound ignorance" of Islam in the US, and its demonization by "opportunists." Yet at the same time, Yoffie challenged American Muslims to combat the anti-Semitism that is rampant in the Muslim world.

The Reform movement determined that ISNA was a genuine partner for interfaith dialogue after it shifted its position from terrorism is bad (except when it is against Israel) to terrorism is bad (even when it kills Jews.) ISNA's efforts to allay Jewish concerns were met with skepticism elsewhere in Jewish Alphabet soup.

Yoffie's overture drew criticism from David Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee.

"Here is another discredited group eager for mainstream recognition," Harris wrote in a blog on the Web site of The Jerusalem Post. "Inadvertently, in the name of inter-religious dialogue, [Yoffie] gave it."

Fortunately for ISNA, while the URJ represents 1.5 million congregants, a plurality of affiliated American Jews, while the AJC represents...the AJC (although to be fair, it performs its role as the Jewish Brookings Institution quite ably).


The skepticism towards ISNA and other American Muslims organizations has a genuine basis. As an initial mater, it is unclear how representative any of the American Muslim organizations really are. Wahhabis and other external groups are spending millions in an effort to strangle a tolerant, indigenous American Islam in its cradle. (Indeed, Jewcy contributor Stephen Suleyman Schwartz has in the past identified ISNA as playing a central role in that campaign.) Leaders of American Muslim organizations have been disingenuous about ties to Islamism, utilizing double-speak to dupe well-intentioned dialogue partners. Finally, even genuinely moderate and tolerant American Muslim leaders have been prone to have an irrational blind spot when it comes to Israel. (It should be noted that the leading critics of American Muslim organizations are often considered quite controversial themselves.)

However, it is critical that American Jews engage in meaningful dialogue with American Muslims, and that dialogue cannot be limited to groups on the guest list at the American Enterprise Institute. There is tremendous ignorance of Judaism in the American Muslim community, and only through engagement can we combat the pernicious leakage of Antisemitism from the wider Muslim world.

Moreover, given the season, it is time that American Jews take a hard look at our own behavior. Far too many of us have let real concerns regarding terror and Israel be used as cover for rank racism and wholesale defamation of a sister faith. Group libels that we would never allow pass against any other group are laughed off. Absurd questions of whether American Muslims are capable of fully participating in American democracy are entertained. The entire Koran is judged by its most problematic passages. The first elected American Muslim congressman is subjected to invective by prominent Jewish pundits and unfair scrutiny by the Jewish defense organizations. We of all people - who have a history of being deemed foreign and impossible to assimilate - should know better than to contribute to a 21st century Know-Nothing movement.

It is too soon to tell whether ISNA's reformation is genuine or whether its invitation to Yoffie will result in genuine, sustained dialogue between our communities. However, for our sake and theirs, we can only hope that a true corner has been turned.


Michael Pine is a former professional Jew who regained amateur status nine years ago, only to become the most cliched of Jewish professionals - a lawyer.


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Anonymous


Unfair scrutiny

Had nothing to do with his religious background and everything to do with his statement. You may disagree with the criticism, but there is nothing to suggest Ellison's Muslim background had anything to do with the ADL's attack.





David Kelsey


Know More Than We Would Like to admit

Dialogue sure is swell, but instead of only finding common ground in our mutual Middle Eastern humanity, perhaps we should take a page from anti-immigration movements of the past, and recognize that a broken clock is still right twice a day.

 We can all sit in a circle and pass around a candle and say, "I am a racist and I..." etc., etc., but let's first close the doors to mass immigration from those countries whose immigrants have caused so many problems already in other Western countries, such as Holland, France, and England.

 

 





mhpine


When has the broken clock been right in the past?

DK,

       I'm curious as to when you think history has vindicated American nativism.  Was  it the mid 19th century campaign against the Irish, or the efforts to limit the Chinese railroad laborers?  Perhaps you think that the successful effort to slam the golden door shut on your own people in the 1920s and 1930s that was warranted?  

          Looking to Europe as a cautionary tale ignores the clear evidence that American Muslims are significantly better adjusted and integrated into American life than they are in Europe.  I don't see any reason why we can't keep the Abu Hamzas out while still providing an opportunity for those Muslims who want nothing more than to become full members of an open and free society.





Anonymous


Have We Abdicated our Responsibilities as Jews?

I'm a graduate student studying the Middle East and learning Arabic. I have been shocked at the visceral reactions to what I do that I get from my Jewish friends and the Jewish community. So many otherwise liberal and tolerant people think it is appropriate to make jokes about all Muslims being terrorists and despise the Arabic language of which they do not speak a single word. So many have asked, "why would you ever want to do THAT?" and told me that I am somehow betraying the proper path for nice Jewish girls. After all, intercultural understanding could never possibly be a road to peace.

It would be wrong to ignore the destructive and hateful voices of and acts of terror committed by those purporting to act in the name of Islam. But it's all too easy to let radical voices drown out the moderate ones that are committed to democracy and peace. As Americans, we have a responsibility to use our freedoms of speech to seek truth and justice, not to spread unnecessarily hateful propaganda. As Jews, we have an even greater responsibility to avoid L'Shon Hara and not to ostracize and alienate other immigrants who are making an earnest effort to be a part of American society, like our immigrant ancestors before them. We can't let sensationalism trump the educational value of educating ourselves about terrorism, nor nativism cloud our own perspectives as participants in a liberal democracy.





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