THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Arab Mistreatment of Jews Has Been Systematic for 1,000 Years By ELIAS COOPER (Editor's note: This ar- ticle, the second in a series, is excerpted from "The Roots of Arab Hos- tility," an eight-page arti- cle which was published in the June-July issue of the American Zionist. The late Dr. Cooper was editor of the magazine and professor of history at Bronx Community Col- lege.) A comparative record of Jewish experience in iristian and • Moslem lands would yield the fol- lowing general picture: while Jews suffered more severe massacres in Chris- tian environments, the pat- tern of discrimination against them, based on theocratic perceptions, was quite as complete under the Crescent as under the Cross. The basic pattern of Arab-Islamic discrimina- tion against religious minorities was established by one• of the early suc- cessors of the Prophet Mohammed, the Caliph Omar, who issued a series of decrees which came to be known as the Pact of Omar. Its purpose was to regulate the status of Jews and Christians, who were jointly referred to as dhim- mis, i.e. "people of the pact," and to provide positive demonstration of Islam's superiority over antecedent revealed religions by impos- ing restrictions on non- Moslems to .underscore their inferiority. Dhimmis were to pay a land tax and poll tax from which Moslems were exempt; though permitted to maintain their existing religious institutions and communal ' • self- government, dhimmi com- munities were forbidden to erect new houses of worship, which were in any case not allowed to compete in size or splendor with Moslem structures; the testimony of dhimmis was usually inad- missible and always un- equal to that of Moslems in a court of law; they were not allowed to ride horses or to bear arms, or in any way of- fend the dignity of a Mos- lem. Subsequently, restric- tions were placed on the kinds of clothing they could wear, occupations they could pursue, and the areas in which they :ould reside (the Arab Jersion of the ghetto pre- ceded the European variety). While some of these rules were relaxed in some localities in cer- tain times, they formed the general pattern of Jewish existence in Arab lands in to the 20th Cen- tury. One reason for the as- sumption that Jews were better off under Islam than under Christianity is that up to the modern era, when European powers estab- lished control over most of the lands of Islam, it was the Christians who suffered most from Moslem in- tolerance. From the Moslem con- quest of Christian Spain to the final defeat of the Chris- tian Byzantine Empire, the Moslem world was in a state of nearly 'continuous war with Christian Europe for eight centuries. And, with the exception of the rela- tively brief triumph of the Crusaders, the Christians were on the losing. side. Those Christians who came under Islamic control suffered frequent mas- sacres, and those who lived behind Moslem lines were not only despised but sus- pected as a fifth column. The Jews, on the other Band, presented no secu- rity risk for the Arab 'and other Islamic overlords until the 20th Century when the Zionist renewal in Palestine threatened to put an end to the dhimmi status that the Arabs had imposed on them. When Arab- spokesmen nowadays stress the "equal- ity" that had been accorded to Jews in Arab countries, they conveniently forget that this condition, not only for Jews but also for Chris- tians, was limited to those Arab areas that came under European control in the 19th and 20th Centuries: Algeria (1830), Tunisia (1881),,Egypt (1882), Libya (1911)Norocco (1912), and the Levant (circa 1918). In those Arab countries where European law was not introduced, as in Yemen, Jews continued to live under the humiliating and oppressive Medieval regimen imposed on them by Islamic jurisprudence. That the equality and se- curity that Jews gained in Arab countries controlled by European powers was due entirely to European imposition against local custom is underscored by the circumstance that when the European powers granted independence to their Arab colonies and pro- tectorates, the situation of the Jews invariably. deter- iorated, on occasion to the point of the loss of physical security. although Thus, Zionism as a modern political movement emerged first among European Jews, it also represented a means of escaping oppression for Jews in Arab-ruled lands. Post-koranic Islamic teaching also places Jews among the enemies of Is- lam. Thus, the orthodox school of Islam always ac- cused Jews of being the source of the most difficult schismatic developments within Islam. Those within Islam who challenged the idea of the divine verbal inspiration of the Koran and claimed that the Koran was created by Mohammed were accused of Friday, September 1, 1919 15 BALFOUR CELEBRATION following the teaching of a particular Jew (Labid ibn al Asim), and the Shiite heresy within Islam was likewise consigned to an "evil Jew" — Abd Allah bin Saba, a convert to Islam who was accused of insin- cerity. Modern students of Islam have raised doubts about these allegations, but these charges demonstrate a Mos- lem tendency to ascribe to Jews whatever might at any time go wrong in the world of Islam. There is even a Moslem conception of a kind of devil in the form of an anti-prophet with a Jewish appearance and intent. Contemporary Is- lamic teaching on this point is very blunt: "Al- lah commands the Mos- lems to fight the friends of Satan wherever they are found. Among the friends of Satan — indeed among the foremost friends of Satan in our present age are the Jews." From the point of view of both Arab traditionalists and radicals or modernists, modern. Israel fits into the demonology of Jewry quite perfectly. From the view- point of both camps, Israel is merely the modern incarna- tion of the enemy in the Arab midst. To Arab radicals, the great enemy for many de- cades has been Western im- perialism, and Israel is viewed by them as the last vestige of the imperialistic challenge the Arabs have had to confront. For orthodox Moslems, the relatively brief con- trol over the Arab world (1918-1945) exercised by Christian powers repre- sented a contradiction of Islamic claims to divinely ordained superiority. It was a calamitous event for Islamic tradi- tionalism when the first people to successfully challenge Western power were the Jews of Pales- tine, who established a new state, Israel, in reality a reincarnation of the ancient Jewish king- dom. This despised people, though fit only for subordi- nation by Islam, had chal- lenged a modern industrial power, Britain, and, what was worse, had defeated the armies of several Arab states. The shock of being de- feated by the despised Jews, the former dhimmis, actu- ally caused Arab theolo- gians to search for some sign in the Koran that this was only a setback along the road to an Arab victory. Israel's success, there- fore, represents a real chal- lenge to Islam and the tradi- tional concept of the Arabs' place in the world and that is why the Jewish state has suffered repeated, if futile, military attack, and relent- less economic and political warfare. . PRESENTS A never-to-be forgotten evening of Music and Mirth! Sunday, Oct. 21, 1979 Ford Auditorium Paul Zim 7:30 p.m. Sy Kleinman "Vocal Virtuoso' "Raconteur Extraordinaire" SIDNEY SILVERMAN President :MAX SOSIN DR. LESTER ZEFF Co-Chairman MRS SIDNEY Z. LEIB Women's committee Chairperson MRS. BERNARD WESTON MRS. I. WALTER SILVER Golden Sponsor Chairpersons. GENERAL CONCERT COMMITTEE CANTOR & MRS. SIMON BERMANIS DR. & MRS. SANFORD A. BENNETT MR. & MRS. SIDNEY L. BRAND MR. & MRS. ALBERT BURKE DR. & MRS. DANIEL BURMAN PHILIP CHAPNICK JULIAN M. COHEN WALTER L. FIELD RABBI LEON FRAM DR. & MRS. ALEX S. FRIEDLAENDER DR. & MRS. SIDNEY FRIEDLAENDER MRS. SARAH GORDON DR. & MRS. JACK R. GREENBERG RABBI IRWIN GRONER DR. & MRS. JOEL I. HAMBURGER DR. & MRS. MAXWELL M. HOFFMAN MRS. NORMA T. HUDOSH MR. & MRS. MORRIS M. JACOBS DR. & MRS. LOUIS L. KAZDAN MRS. PAULINE B. KLEIN MR. & MRS. RICHARD B. KRAMER DR. SIDNEY Z. LEIB MR. & MRS. SQL LIFSITZ DR. & MRS. THEODORE MANDELL DR. & MRS. HAROLD A. MAXMEN MR.. & MRS. MAX NOSANCHUK CANTOR HAROLD ORBACH MR. & MRS. LOUIS PANUSH MR. & MRS. JOSEPH POHL LEONARD L. RADNER MR. & MRS. JULIUS RING MR. & MRS. SHERMAN SHAPIRO MR. & MRS. HERZL SHUR MR. & MRS. MARVIN SIEGEL DR. I. WALTER SILVER MR. & MRS. ALLAN H. SILVERMAN MRS. SIDNEY SILVERMAN MR. & MRA. PHILIP SLOMOVITZ & MRS. CARMI SLOMOVITZ DRS. SION & ELAINE SOLEYMANI MRS. MAX SOSIN HON. MICHAEL L. STACEY DR. & MRS. EDWARD TREISMAN DR. BERNARD WESTON MRS. ALBERT FINKELSTEIN Executive Director SPONSORED BY THE ZIONIST ORGANIZATION OF AMERICA THE DETROIT DISTRICT 18451 W. 10 MILE ROAD, SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN, PHONE 569-1515