Fri, Dec 05, 2008

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Jewcy Book Club

This week:
and My Jesus YearDumbfounded
Welcome Authors
Benyamin Cohen
&
Matthew Rothschild
who are posting all week.
Coming up:
  • 12/08:
    Seth Greenland

FAITHHACKER

Are Muslims in the UK Being Treated “Like Jews”?

Tamar Fox
I really really REALLY hate it when people bring up the Holocaust as a trump card. I have a huge respect for everyone who died in camps, and on death marches, and in ghettoes, and everywhere else during World War II, and that’s why I cringe whenever camps, ghettoes and death marches are brought up in political conversations. It seems disrespectful, and it also often seems whiny. And then when people start calling Jews Nazis for any reason whatsoever I just turn my back on the conversation entirely, because it seems to me that there’s NOTHING to be gained when you call someone a Nazi, and when that person is Jewish, you’re gonna get your tush kicked by someone’s Israeli soldier cousin, or the ADL, depending on who “you” are.
British Muslims Have Their Houses Searched for ExplosivesBritish Muslims Have Their Houses Searched for Explosives
But I have to admit, I didn’t know what to think when I saw this headline on an article in the London Times: We’re victimised like Jews by the Nazis, says Muslim leader.

On the one hand, all kinds of alarm bells are going off in my head right now. On the other hand, the article presents some pretty compelling evidence. There are nine Muslim men being held without charges in British prisons, and Mohammad Naseem, chairman of the Birmingham Central Mosque, is understandably pissed about it. Muslims feel like they’re being “picked on,” he says, and feel that they’re being made the scapegoat of a terrorist witch hunt.

I think those are legitimate sentiments. I mean, when 13 Jewish men were randomly accused of espionage in Iran, the Jewish community completely freaked out.

Clearly, though, the British Muslim community is producing some terrorists who are committing acts of terrorism (like 7/7) fueled by a certain understanding of the Q’uran. And those people are causing all the negative response. But in Nazi Germany I’m pretty sure there was a blatant disregard for facts one way or another. The government was going out of their way to be explicitly anti-Semitic, more interested in broad strokes than making scapegoats of particular people (and if I’m wrong about this, somebody please correct me).

I guess what I’m saying is, I think the Nazis solution was generally just to fabricate things completely, and wait until some random case came along that happened to uphold their view, and then to glorify that case. And in Britain it seems like people are just scared, so they’re taking the little information they have and applying it way too broadly, which results in the demonization of Muslims. This isn’t helped by an inept and insensitive government (but what is?).

Just when I was ready to write off the Times article as useless and over-the-top, I came across this penultimate quote, by Sir Iqbal Sacranie, former leader of the Muslim Council of Britain: “I wouldn’t have used the Nazi reference but I know from the number of calls that we are getting that people are really disturbed by the onslaught on the Muslim community.”

Well, yeah. That’s pretty reasonable. But if you’re looking for something really helpful, check out this article from The Guardian about how eerily parallel the treatment of Jews and Muslims has been in Britain. Pretty much left my head spinning.
Tamar Fox

Tamar Fox has an MFA from Vanderbilt University in Nashville, but she still doesn't like sweet tea. Born and raised in Chicago, she's also lived in Iowa City, Dublin, Oxford, and Jerusalem. When she's not rocking out at honky tonks she teaches


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Superman


This is an awesome article.  I agree that it is dangerous to use the Holocaust as a trump card...but, I think that Muslims being stripped of their civil liberties is definitely something we need to look at.  It is important because just as the Jews were "othered" by society (and still are today) the Muslim community is being "othered" as well.  

 

 

 

 

 





Anonymous


I think i would definately have to agree with this because although some muslims are the subject of terrorist attacks it doesnt mean that people have the right to pick on them.Anyone who discriminates against muslims for other poeple's actions should be ashamed of themselves.





mmausner


as almost every nation-state on earth has at some point abused civil liberties and done things like imprisonment or execution without trial, collective punishment or ethnic cleansing, you name it, it's STILL disingenuous to compare things to the Nazis. You have to REALLY work at it to deserve comparison with the Nazis. I mean, come on. 13 people imprisoned without trial? Not to defend it, but where is that on the scale of Darfur, Somalia, Rwanda? Tibet? Kurdistan?

Yes, it's worthy of news, worthy of note, worthy of protest, and I can understand why the Muslim advocates threw the 'nazi' verbal hand grenade.  It gets attention.  But in a juvenile way that cheapens overall political discourse.  It's crying wolf.  What happens when bigger things, worse things happen, which do and which will?  What happens when Holland or France or (ahem) Germany wants to expel all their Muslims?  What happens when you have no way to escalate your language of advocacy, your hyperbole of protest? 

This is part of Israel's problem (and Palestine's): hysterical crying about Israel's terrible 'occupation' has debased the terminology and weakened the Palestinians' cause, and frequent Jewish reference to Mein Kampf being the Arab world bestseller, etc. leaves Jews no room for nuance in dealing with the many flavors of our enemies.

There is plenty of wrong in the world, plenty of evil to go around.  But the Nazis achieved a near perfect absolute of evil.  Let's keep that in mind, and recognize that in order to get to the truth of issues and to transcend them, we need to stay grounded in language with both power, clarity of morals, AND nuance.