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  • Jewish Group Says US `Soft' on Arabs

    Islam Online, UK
    Jan 11 2005

    Jewish Group Says US `Soft' on Arabs


    Bush signed in October into law a controversial bill on combating the
    so-called global `anti-Semitism.' (Reuters)


    By Adam Wild Aba, IOL Correspondent

    WASHINGTON, January 11 (IslamOnline.net) - A US Jewish organization
    has criticized the State Department's first annual report on
    anti-Semitism, saying it has taken a soft line with `anti-Semitic'
    Arab governments.

    The Philadelphia-based Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies said in
    a press release that the US report only concentrated on anti-Semitic
    practices in South America and Europe while it turned a blind eye to
    the `anti-Semitism sponsored by some Arab governments.'

    `It is encouraging that the report includes Israel-Nazi analogies in
    its definition of anti-Semitism, but it is disappointing that the
    report says so little about some Arab governments which promote such
    analogies and other types of anti- Semitism,' the institute said in a
    press release on its website.

    The US State Department issued on January 5 its first annual report
    on anti-Semitism around the globe.

    The 37-page report claimed that anti-Jewish practices were mounting
    in Europe and other parts of the world since the outbreak of the
    second Palestinian Intifada four years ago.

    On October 17, US President George W. Bush signed into law a
    controversial bill on combating the so-called global anti-Semitism.

    The law commits the US State Department to documenting acts of
    physical violence against Jews, their property, cemeteries and places
    of worship abroad, as well as local governments' responses to them
    and take note of instances of anti-Jewish propaganda and governments'
    readiness to promote unbiased school curricula.

    `Soft'

    The institute claimed that the US report was `soft' on addressing
    `anti-Semitic' practices in the Arab world.

    `The section about Iceland, for instance, is 387 words long, even
    though the report notes only one instance of anti-Semitic harassment
    and one hostile cartoon there.

    `By contrast, Saudi Arabia is given just 182 words, including the
    apparently contradictory statements that `Anti-Semitic
    sentiments...were present in the print and electronic media. The
    local press rarely printed articles or commentaries disparaging other
    religions,'' the institute said.

    It said the report only mentioned 86 words about the Palestinian
    Authority, more than half of which cited a sermon broadcast by the
    Palestinian television pressing for tolerance `but without mentioning
    Jews.'

    `That sermon unfortunately was not typical of sermons that are
    broadcast on PA TV and radio, which often contain anti-Semitic
    themes, including denial of the Holocaust. Additionally, the State
    Department report does not mention instances of anti-Semitism in the
    PA-controlled press,' the institute added.

    The press release further alleged that the government-sponsored
    anti-Semitic practices in countries such as Armenia (194 words),
    Brazil (149) and Azerbaijan (142) were given more space in the report
    rather than anti-Semitic practices of some Arab countries.

    `Anti-Semitism'

    According to Encyclopedia Britannica, anti-Semitism is hostility
    toward or discrimination against Jews as a religious or racial group.


    It was coined in 1879 by German agitator Wilhelm Marr to designate
    the anti-Jewish campaigns underway in central Europe at that time.

    However, Richard Levy, a professor of History in Chicago, had told
    IslamOnline.net the term was often misused when Jews and others
    `refuse to see any difference between criticism of Israeli policies
    and anti-Semitism'.

    Pundits and linguists also believe that Israeli officials and US
    neo-conservatives are using now `anti-Semitism' to stifle any
    criticism of the aggressive Israeli practices against the Palestinian
    people.

    Former Israeli immigration minister Natan Sharansky had said that the
    `specious line between anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism has now become
    completely blurred.'

    Norman Podhoretz, a prominent US neo-conservative writer, agreed that
    anti-Zionism was not the other side of the coin.

    `Anti-Zionism has become the main and most relevant form of
    anti-Semitism,' he had said.

    A leading American civil rights organization kept pressure on the
    publishers of an edition of a Merriam Webster's dictionary for
    linking anti-Semitism to Zionism and Israel.
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