Thursday, August 18, 2016

US report slams dire antisemitism in Muslim lands

 
Antisemtic anti-Zionism in the Turkish TV series 'Valley of the Wolves'  

The annual US State Department Report into Religious Freedom has produced a scathing 2015 report on officially-sanctioned antisemitism in Arab and Muslim countries. (Oddly, it talks about discriminatory sharia law against Jews in Saudi Arabia, when the Kingdom bans Jews altogether.) Lea Speyer in The Algemeiner comes up with this analysis:

In Algeria, non-Sunni Muslims and people of other religions, including Christians and Jews, “often kept a low profile” after coming under threat or experiencing intolerance, the report said. Antisemitic anti-Zionism was also found among government leaders, including the Algerian president’s chief of staff, who accused a rival of trying to “help the Zionists” and “selling Algeria to the Jews.” 
 
In Afghanistan, the report listed only one Jewish person as a resident of the country.

In Iran, the regime continued its practice of “restrictions and discrimination against Jews.” According to the Tehran Jewish Committee, the principals of Jewish schools are required to be Muslim and schools must remain open on Saturdays, “in violation of Jewish religious law,” the report said. While the government supposedly allows Hebrew instruction in Jewish schools, the distribution of Hebrew texts, “particularly nonreligious texts,” are limited, “making it difficult to teach the language.” 

In Yemen, the Jewish community’s predicament is even more dire. Locals in Amran continue their “harassment of Jewish community members,” the report said, “including by throwing stones and coercion to convert to Islam.” Out of fear for their lives, Jewish students continue to stay away from public schools even as attempts to establish private Jewish schools are blocked. 

The media in Muslim majority countries, the report found, plays a large role in contributing to antisemitism and antisemitic forms of anti-Zionism. 

The Egyptian government, the report said, “generally failed to take action against or condemn antisemitic comments that appeared in both government-owned and private media.”

“Talk show hosts occasionally approved the killing of Jewish civilians and failed to distinguish between Jews and supporters of Israeli policies in broadcasts critical of such policies,” the report explained. “Private Salafist media sometimes included antisemitic programming that glorified or denied the Holocaust, including in interviews with academics and clerics. There were reports of imams using antisemitic rhetoric in their sermons, including allegations that Jews were responsible for the ‘spilled blood’ of Muslim Palestinians.”

In Turkey, an antisemitic film — which “paints the Jews as the country’s biggest enemy” — was “broadcast repeatedly on private television channels and posted on the websites of several pro-government media outlets,” the report found. 

In Jordan, editorial cartoons, articles and public statements by politicians echoed antisemitic tropes and “conflated anti-Israel sentiment with antisemitic sentiment.” In Saudi Arabia, Jews are continually portrayed using “stereotypical images…along with Jewish symbols, particularly at times of heightened political tension with Israel.”

In the country’s legal system, Jews in Saudi Arabia are also largely discriminated against. For example, should a court rule in favor of a Jew in a case of compensation for accidental death or injury, the Jewish plaintiff “is entitled to receive only 50 percent of the compensation a Muslim male would receive,” the report said. 

Read article in full 


2 comments:

  1. I actually saw this movie because someone managed to post the whole thing on YouTube with English subtitles (this was five years ago, it's been taken down). It had the familiar trope of the anti-Zionist Jew distancing themselves from the evil "Zionist entity" as one of the main characters was an American Jewish woman traveling with Turkish commandos (for some reason) who at the end of the movie embraced Islam by donning a hijab. And, of course, it promoted the myth of Mavi Marmara being a peaceful convoy as the opening sequence was someone on the loudspeaker shouting that they were coming in peace before the Israelis showed up. Overall, it was just loaded with terrible action sequences and tired anti-Israel tropes. I still wonder how I managed to watch the whole thing.

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