The
issue of Israel’s existence as a Jewish State is the very core of
the Arab-Israeli conflict. If Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas, or any other Muslim leader for that
matter, were to agree that Israel is a Jewish state, he would be in
opposition to the Islamic religious concepts of “defense
of Muslim lands”
and of non-Muslims as dhimmi.
Though
not found in the Qur’an, the obligation for the defense of Muslim
lands is a core concept in medieval and modern Muslim theology,
dating back to the 13th
century Muslim exegete
Ibn Taymiyyah,
who declared that all Muslims are obligated to rise up and attack any
non-Muslim who takes Muslim land. It is a compulsory
duty (fard Ayn)
to wage interminable jihad until the Muslim land is reclaimed and
again under its divinely ordained and rightful Muslim sovereignty.
There
are Muslim scholars who disagree. They quote the Qur’anic
references
in Chapters V and XVII and elsewhere which state specifically that
Allah
gave the Promised Land
to the Children of Israel as an eternal
inheritance. However, Ibn Taymiyyah’s interpretation, that Palestine is Muslim
land and must be reclaimed from the Jews, despite the Qur’anic
references to God’s promise to the Israelites, seems to prevail in
modern Muslim thought.
The
concept of dhimmi is based upon a Qur’anic source, Sura 9:29, in which
Muslims are commanded to make the defeated non-Muslims feel low and
subdued. The “Pact
of Omar”
written during the time of the Caliph Omar II (early 8th
century), but ascribed to the 7th
century Caliph Omar 1, established a list of regulations detailing
the status of non-Muslims under Muslim rule, and circumscribing their
behavior. While there is scholarly debate about the extent to which
these laws were enforced, it is clear that the position of the
dhimmi was
subordinate to that of Muslim, and as such the dhimmi
could
never be a full citizen of any Muslim state, and could never be in a
position of authority or sovereignty over Muslims.
Given
the high antiquity and religious authority of these concepts, no
Muslim leader can acknowledge or recognized Israel as a Jewish
state. To do so would be to ignore Allah’s command that Jews
(along with other non-Muslims) are condemned to dhimmitude
and
are not free citizens with their own sovereignty. Similarly, an
acknowledgement of Jewish sovereignty and statehood would be an
admission that “Palestine” is not Muslim land but is in fact
Jewish “Israel.” And, most critical of all, such
acknowledgements would mean that there is no basis for declaring a
jihad against Israel or against Jews. Instead, by refusing such
recognition and maintaining that Israel is an illegal occupier from
an Islamic ideological viewpoint, holding Jewish sovereignty over
Muslim land contrary to God’s will, Arab leadership can declare the
need to maintain a holy jihad until the land is again under divinely
ordained Muslim sovereignty.
This
is an important issue because it reveals that the prime motivation
for the conflict is not borders or water sources or refugees: it is
the Arab refusal to accommodate the existence of a Jewish state. Such a motivation, arising from what in essence is Islamic
institutionalized religious apartheid, is inconsistent with the
sensibilities of 21st
century western culture, and would thus have difficulty finding
support among western nations. So Abbas
and others lie
about it. They pretend that a Jewish state is likely to
discriminate against its non-Jewish inhabitants — a rather risible
claim since non-Jewish minorities in Israel are far better off than
any minorities, Muslim or non-Muslim, in Arab lands. Or they argue
that a religious definition of a state is inherently racist —
beyond risible since they have no such complaint against the Islamic
republic of Iran or the self-identified Muslim states of Afghanistan,
Pakistan, Yemen, Oman, Kuwait, Qatar, or Saudi Arabia.
To
further obfuscate the real motivation for their animus toward Israel,
Arab leaders and propaganda sources have focused the world’s
attention on a variety of issues such as borders, water rights,
refugee repatriation, and the status of Jerusalem: all of which could
be resolved in peaceful negotiations, if the Arab side were willing
to end the conflict peacefully. All too many of our mainstream
media outlets and our political leaders have been duped by this
obfuscation. And all attempts at resolution have failed because
the focus has been on Israel’s concessions to these propagandistic
demands, while ignoring the real cause of the conflict: Arab leaders’
unwillingness to accept Jewish sovereignty over what they still
consider Muslim land.
But
a Palestinian Authority spokesperson let the proverbial cat out of
the bag, perhaps inadvertently, in early 2011. Among the
“Palestinian papers” released to the world via Wikileaks, there
is one called “Talking
Points on Recogntion
[sic] of Jewish State.” In
this paper
the Palestinian Authority spokesperson details the reasons
for not accepting
Israel as a Jewish state. Among
them:
“Recognizing the Jewish state implies recognition of a Jewish
people and recognition of its right to self-determination…. Those
who assert this right also assert that the territory historically
associated with this right of self-determination (i.e., the
self-determination unit) is all of Historic Palestine. Therefore,
recognition of the Jewish people and their right of
self-determination may lend credence to the Jewish people’s claim
to all of Historic Palestine.”
In
other words, if Abbas were to acknowledge that Israel is a Jewish
state, then he would have acknowledged that Jews have the right to
political self-determination and national self-realization, just what
he claims for the Palestinians, and just what the Qur’anic concept
of dhimmitude
denies to Jews. Arab leaders don not want to do that because
that would strengthen the Israeli argument for Israel’s just demand
of those same rights. And such an admission would acknowledge that
Jews can have sovereignty over Muslims (Arab Muslim citizens of
Israel) and over what Muslims call Muslim land. So Abbas must
continue to deny the obvious, no matter how ridiculous it sounds,
because to not do so will weaken his own arguments. And to admit that
the motivation for the animus that so much of the Muslim world bears
toward Israel originates in the Islamic religious concepts of dhimmi
and of the inadmissibility of non-Muslim sovereignty on Muslim land
would be to reveal the real core issue in the conflict: the Muslim
religious apartheid ideology of the supremacy of Islam.
Excerpted from "Why Abbas Cannot Recognize Israel as a Jewish State," by
David Meir-Levi (July 26, 2011)
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