Anger at Netanyahu claim Palestinian grand mufti inspired Holocaust
The Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu,
has attracted a storm of criticism for an incendiary speech in which he
accused the second world war Palestinian grand mufti of Jerusalem of
having suggested the genocide of the Jews to Adolf Hitler.
The comments in a speech to the World Zionist Congress
in Jerusalem came in the context of the current violence between
Israelis and Palestinians and were condemned by historians and the
Israeli opposition leader, Isaac Herzog, for trivialising the Holocaust.
On the Palestinian side, senior official Saeb Erekat described the remarks as absolving Hitler.
In his speech, Netanyahu purported to describe a meeting between Haj
Amin al-Husseini and Hitler in November 1941. “Hitler didn’t want to
exterminate the Jews at the time, he wanted to expel the Jews. And Haj
Amin al-Husseini went to Hitler and said: ‘If you expel them, they’ll
all come here [to Palestine].’” According to Netanyahu, Hitler then
asked: “What should I do with them?” and the mufti replied: “Burn them.”
Among those questioning Netanyahu’s interpretation of history
was Prof Dan Michman, the head of the Institute of Holocaust Research
at Bar-Ilan University and head of the International Institute for
Holocaust Research at Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust memorial centre. He
said that while Hitler did indeed meet the mufti, this happened after
the Final Solution began.
At the centre of the row is Netanyahu’s suggestion that Hitler had
wanted to expel Jews and that it was Husseini who somehow persuaded him
instead to kill them when the two men met in late November 1941.
In reality, the mass killings of Jews by SS mobile killing units –
Einsatzgruppen – were already under way when the two men met face to
face. The first was in Lithuania in July 1941, described by Yad Vashem
as the “beginning” of the Final Solution.
In September 1941, again before Husseini’s meeting with Hitler,
Einsatzgruppe C, commanded by Otto Rasch, killed more than 33,000 Jews
over two days in the Babi Yar ravine on the outskirts of Kiev, an act of
mass murder ordered by the new Nazi military governor of Kiev, Maj Gen
Kurt Eberhard.
Netanyahu’s incendiary comments come amid a rising death toll
and accusations of incitement on both sides, with Israelis pointing to
comments made by Palestinian officials and inflammatory material on
social media, and Palestinians equally accusing Netanyahu’s government
of fanning the flames and pointing to anti-Palestinian material on
social media.
The violence continued on Wednesday with several incidents, including
a stabbing that critically injured a 19-year-old female Israeli
soldier.
Over the past month, 10 Israelis have been killed in Palestinian
attacks, most of them stabbings. In that time, 46 Palestinians were
killed by Israeli fire, including 25 identified by Israel as attackers,
and the rest in clashes with Israeli troops. An Eritrean asylum seeker died after being shot
by a security guard and beaten by a mob who mistakenly believed he was a
Palestinian assailant during a deadly Arab attack at a bus station.
Reacting to Netanyahu’s comments, Herzog wrote on his Facebook page:
“This is a dangerous historical distortion and I demand Netanyahu
correct it immediately as it minimises the Holocaust, Nazism and …
Hitler’s part in our people’s terrible disaster.”
He added that Netanyahu’s remarks played into the hands of Holocaust
deniers. “A historian’s son must be accurate about history,” Herzog
wrote. “Netanyahu has forgotten that he’s not only the prime minister of
Israel
but the prime minister of the Jewish people’s government.” The grand
mufti, added Herzog, “gave the order to kill my grandfather, Rabbi
Herzog, and actively supported Hitler”.
Herzog’s fellow Zionist Union MP Itzik Shmuli called on Netanyahu to
apologise to Holocaust victims. “This is a great shame, a prime minister
of the Jewish state at the service of Holocaust-deniers – this is a
first,” he said. “This isn’t the first time Netanyahu distorts
historical facts, but a lie of this magnitude is the first.”
Denouncing Netanyahu’s comments, Erekat, the chief Palestinian peace
negotiator, also weighed into the row. “It is a sad day in history when
the leader of the Israeli government hates his neighbour so much so that
he is willing to absolve the most notorious war criminal in history, Adolf Hitler, of the murder of 6 million Jews during the Holocaust.”
Seeking to defend Netanyahu, the defence minister, Moshe Ya’alon,
told Army Radio that the idea for the Final Solution was Hitler’s and
the mufti had joined him, and accused the Palestinian Authority of
employing “incitement” that was “the legacy of the Nazis”.
“I don’t know what exactly the prime minister said. History is
actually very, very clear,” said Ya’alon. “Hitler initiated it, Haj Amin
al-Husseini joined him, and unfortunately the jihadi movements promote
antisemitism to this day, including incitement in the Palestinian
Authority that is based on the legacy of the Nazis.”
Netanyahu’s comments follow remarks made by the energy minister,
Yuval Steinitz, at a recent conference in Washington, who accused the
Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, of “Nazi-like incitement”.
Steinitz – one of Netanyahu’s most loyal allies who often echoes the
Israeli prime minister’s positions – labelled Abbas “the number one
inciter in the world against Israel and the Jewish people” and compared
his attacks against the Jewish state to Nazi propaganda.
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