Irish Examiner:
The promotion of pluralism and tolerance is the primary challenge for Europe and the Middle East. In its absence thank goodness for the Jewish state, argues Dr. Einat Wilf.
Iraqi-Jewish refugee arrives in Israel, 1951. |
He went on to explain that while it has been more than sixty years since nearly a million Jews of the Arab Middle East have been expelled and forced out of their home countries, it is now becoming evident that this merely foreshadowed things to come.
He recounted his horror by the rising tide of Islamic brutality, genocide, and ethnic cleansing of Christian communities that is taking place everywhere the Islamic State is gaining ground. Just like the Jewish communities, those Christian communities – gone overnight - have been there before the birth of Islam and the Arab conquest of the region.
He said that he is terrified to think of an Arab Middle East without minorities. He expressed fear that the intolerance demonstrated towards the Jews decades ago is now being turned towards almost all other minorities from Christian to Allewaites to Shiites to the Sunni Muslims who fail to uphold the demented standards for Muslim piety set by the Islamic State.
My Arab colleague was brave enough to admit this simple truth that the world has learned over and over again, and yet seems to never internalize: It starts with the Jews. It never ends with the Jews. [...]
Tragically, Europe worked out its identity as a continent, its ideologies and its loyalties, on the back and ultimately, on the ashes, of the Jews, nearly destroying the entire European civilization in the process.
When Europe is experiencing yet again rising tides of hatred and intolerance towards Jews – whatever else it might call it and however it might seek to mask it. It is time for Europe to ask what is wrong with Europe and not what is wrong with the Jews. Europe’s vision of itself is challenged from within and without, and this time around, it seems that many Jews don’t plan to stick around to find out how Europe will resolve the European Question "this time around”.
The Arab world is no different with respect to the “Jewish Question”. It is not about the Jews, and not even about Israel and Zionism, it is about the question of Arab and Muslim identity. And, like Europe before it and, sadly perhaps still today, it is working out its identity, ideologies, and loyalties - initially on the back of the Jews and now on the back of other minorities.
The Christians of the Middle East believed they would find their peace and security by aligning themselves with Arab nationalism and becoming some of its most vocal defenders. They thought that by aligning themselves with Arab intolerance towards Jews, they would shield themselves from the simple fact that the vast majority of Arabs were Muslims and that as far as Muslim theology is concerned Christians, like Jews, are not and cannot be considered equal to Muslims. [...]
My colleague overlooked the irony that the only place in the Middle East were Christians were not fleeing, but were secure, growing and prospering, was in the Jewish State of Israel. [...]
2 commentaires :
La dernière communauté importante en nombre étant celle qui vit en France. Ce qui est intéressant c'est de connaitre le nombre des départs. Si c'est ce nombre est de cinq mille par année et qu'il restera stable, compte tenu du nombre de naissance, cela couvre à peine ou peut-être pas le renouvellement de la communauté juive française.
Comme maintenant que c'est au tour des chrétiens d'Orient, la tolérance prétendue de la religion d'amour , commence à être très sérieusement mise à mal. De là les multiples déclarations dans les médias: non ce n'est pas ça l’islam. Il faudra nous expliquer que ce ne ce sont pas de gentils brahmanes qui inspirent de textes védiques.
Franco
Les maghrébins, surtout les algériens du FLN, ont massacré les juifs pieds noirs pendant les guerres d'indépendance et après. C'était la valise ou le cercueil après des tortures atroces.
En 1962, 150000 juifs pieds noirs ont fui l'Algérie précipitamment en y laissant la majeure partie de leurs biens. Mais ceux-là eurent beaucoup de chance; un certain nombre, malheureusement, ont été assassinés après avoir subi la barbarie et les viols.
Les harkis ont connu ce triste sort aussi de façon massive parce que la France les avait abandonnés.
Et aujourd'hui, la haine continue. En Mars 2012, un extrémiste algérien, digne des terroristes algériens de 1962 et du GIA de 1990, Merah, a tué trois enfants juifs, leur père, et trois militaires à Toulouse. En Mai 2014, un autre, Nemmouche a tué quatre juifs dans le Musée juif de Bruxelles.
Ils nous poursuivent jusqu'en Europe en s'y installant depuis des décennies pour nous abattre.
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