JERUSALEM (AP) — Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu sparked an uproar in Israel on Wednesday for
suggesting that a World War II-era Palestinian leader persuaded the
Nazis to adopt their Final Solution to exterminate 6 million Jews.
Holocaust
experts and survivors slammed Netanyahu's comments as historically
inaccurate and serving the interests of Holocaust deniers by lessening
the responsibility of Adolf Hitler and the Nazis. Critics also said the
statement amounts to incitement against modern-day Palestinians in the
midst of a wave of violent unrest and high tensions.
Speaking
to a group of Jewish leaders Tuesday, Netanyahu tried to use a
historical anecdote to illustrate his claim that Palestinian incitement
surrounding Jerusalem's most sensitive holy site goes back decades. He
has repeatedly claimed that a wave of Palestinian attacks in recent
weeks is the result of decades of hatred, and not connected to Israel's
48-year occupation of lands claimed by the Palestinians, as the
Palestinians have claimed.
Netanyahu said the World War II-era
grand mufti of Jerusalem, Nazi sympathizer Haj Amin al-Husseini, also
instigated Palestinian attacks on Jews over lies that they planned to
destroy the Temple Mount, known to Muslims at the Noble Sanctuary.
Netanyahu
said al-Husseini played a "central role in fomenting the final
solution" by trying to convince Hitler to destroy the Jews during a
November 1941 meeting in Berlin.
"Hitler
didn't want to exterminate the Jews at the time, he wanted to expel the
Jews," Netanyahu told the group. "And Haj Amin al-Husseini went to
Hitler and said, 'If you expel them, they'll all come here.' 'So what
should I do with them?' he asked. He said, 'Burn them.'"
Details
of the meeting between al-Husseini and Hitler are sketchy. The Nazis
released a grainy propaganda video showing the mufti making a Nazi
salute before a warm handshake. The official record from the meeting
says Hitler pledged "the annihilation of Jewry living in Arab space."While the Nazis' official endorsement of the Final Solution came months after the meeting, historians note that the Nazis' mass killing of Jews was already well underway.
Several
concentration camps were up and running, and Hitler had previously
repeatedly declared his lethal intentions for the Jews. If anything,
they said it was the Nazis who were trying to use al-Husseini for their
own propaganda interests and that Hitler didn't need any outside
inspiration. When Hitler did consider deporting Jews, it was in the
context of sending them to countries like Ukraine and Lithuania where
they would face persecution or death.
Moshe Zimmermann, a
prominent Holocaust and anti-Semitism researcher at the Hebrew
University in Jerusalem, said Netanyahu made a "far-reaching argument"
that didn't hold up.
"Any
attempt to deflect the burden from Hitler to others is a form of
Holocaust denial," he told The Associated Press. "It cheapens the
Holocaust."
Al-Husseini was
an enthusiastic Nazi supporter who helped recruit Bosnian Muslims to
their side and whose anti-Semitism was well documented. But Zimmermann
called him a "lightweight" who was pleading with Hitler for assistance
in getting rid of the British Mandate and the Jewish immigrants coming
to the Holy Land. He said there was no evidence al-Husseini had any real
influence on Hitler. Records show that at the meeting, Hitler turned
down a request to form a formal treaty.
Dina Porat, the chief
historian at the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial, said that al-Husseini's
goal was to have Hitler include the Jews of Palestine in his
extermination plans."Still, this does not mean that he was the one who gave Hitler the idea to get rid of the Jews," she said. "He didn't need the mufti in order to have the idea."
Netanyahu
has long been criticized for invoking the Holocaust when talking about
current affairs, alluding to it especially when discussing Iran and its
nuclear program. The son of a historian, Netanyahu also has a record of
slipping up when citing historical facts.
The
prime minister's comments came at a particularly sensitive time, as he
was making his way to Berlin Wednesday for meetings with German
Chancellor Angela Merkel. Netanyahu tried to calm the uproar and clarify
himself prior to his departure.
"I had no intention of absolving
Hitler of his diabolical responsibility for exterminating European Jews
... at the same time, it is absurd to ignore the role the mufti played,"
he said, adding that it was tied directly to Palestinian sentiments
today."The father of the Palestinian nation then, without a state and without what is called 'occupation,' without the territories and settlements, was involved then in serial incitement to destroy the Jews," he said. "Unfortunately, Haj Amin al-Husseini is still an admired figure in Palestinian society."
Asked by reporters, Merkel spokesman Steffen Seibert wouldn't address Netanyahu's statements directly.
"We are aware that this crime against humanity was Germany's very own responsibility," he said. "It must never be forgotten, and I see no reason for us to change our picture of history in any way."
Netanyahu is also set to meet U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry in Berlin in new efforts to bring an end to a monthlong wave of attacks that have raised fears that the region is on the cusp of a new round of bloodshed.
Netanyahu has repeatedly accused Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas of inciting the violence, while Palestinians say years of Israeli occupation are at the root of the unrest.
In Israel, many quickly accused Netanyahu of going overboard.
Opposition leader Isaac Herzog called it a "dangerous historical distortion" that plays into the hands of Holocaust deniers.
"It downplays the Holocaust, Nazism and the role of Adolf Hitler in the great tragedy of our people," he said.
Colette Avital, who heads the umbrella organization of Holocaust survivors, said survivors were baffled and Zehava Galon, head of the dovish Meretz party, noted that her ancestors were killed months before Hitler and the mufti even met.
"To what depths will this man stoop?" Galon said. "He who can't act to change the future, all he has left is to rewrite the past."
Even Netanyahu's loyal defense minister, Moshe Yaalon, distanced himself from the comments, saying that "history is actually very, very clear."
"Hitler initiated it, Haj Amin al-Husseini joined him and unfortunately the jihadist movements promote anti-Semitism to this day, including incitement in the Palestinian Authority that is based on the legacy of the Nazis," he told Israel's Army Radio.
Palestinian officials accused Netanyahu of distorting history.
"It is a sad day in history when the leader of the Israeli government hates his neighbor so much so that he is willing to absolve the most notorious war criminal in history," said senior Palestinian official Saeb Erekat.
He sidestepped the Palestinian role in World War II, claiming that "Palestinian efforts against the Nazi regime are a deep-rooted part of our history."
At
a meeting with the visiting U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon, Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas accused Netanyahu of trying to rewrite history.
"Now he says Hitler is not responsible," he said.
In
a Ph.D dissertation, Abbas questioned the extent of the Holocaust,
drawing accusations that he was a Holocaust denier. He has since
distanced himself from the claims, calling the Holocaust a "despicable
crime."
netanyahu causes uproar by linking palestinian to holocaust
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