Netanyahu under fire after accusing Palestinian grand mufti of inciting Holocaust
Israeli
PM Benjamin Netanyahu has come under fire for accusing the World War
II Palestinian grand mufti of convincing Adolf Hitler to exterminate
the Jews. The bold claim has been deemed incorrect by historians and
Israeli opposition leaders.
Speaking
to the Zionist Congress on Tuesday, Netanyahu spoke of a series of
attacks by Muslims against Jews in Palestine during the 1920s,
stating that those assaults were instigated by Haj Amin al-Husseini,
the grand mufti of Jerusalem at that time.
Al-Husseini
flew to meet Adolf Hitler in Berlin in 1941, and that meeting was
instrumental in the Nazi leader's decision to launch a campaign to
exterminate Jews, Netanyahu said in his speech.
"Hitler
didn't want to exterminate the Jews at the time, he wanted to expel
the Jews. And Haj Amin al-Husseini went to Hitler and said, 'If you
expel them, they'll all come here.'”
Netanyahu
then alleged that Hitler asked what he should do with the Jews – to
which al-Husseini replied: “Burn them.”
The
comments immediately received a backlash from opposition politicians
and Holocaust experts, who accused Netanyahu of twisting historical
facts.
Palestinian
officials said Netanyahu appeared to be absolving Hitler of his
crimes in order to blame Muslims.
"It
is a sad day in history when the leader of the Israeli government
hates his neighbor so much that he is willing to absolve the most
notorious war criminal in history, Adolf Hitler, of the murder of 6
million Jews," said
Saeb Erekat, the Palestine Liberation Organization's secretary
general, as quoted by Reuters.
He
added that Netanyahu “should
stop using this human tragedy to score points for his political end.”
But
the criticism didn't just come from the Palestinian side. Even
Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon said that Netanyahu's claims
were incorrect.
"It
certainly wasn't [Husseini] who invented the Final Solution," Yaalon
told Israel's Army Radio."That
was the evil brainchild of Hitler himself."
Zionist
Union MP Itzik Shmuli called on Netanyahu to apologize to Holocaust
victims.
“This
isn’t the first time Netanyahu distorts historical facts, but a lie
of this magnitude is the first,”Shmuli
said, as quoted by the Guardian.
Social
media was also awash with criticism for Netanyahu
“I
can’t say it’s surprising. It’s obviously not a mistake.
Netanyahu has a history of inflammatory statements,” Robert
Naiman, policy director at the Just Foreign Policy think tank, told
RT. “People
expect different behavior from government officials,” he dded.
The
claim, which the Israeli leader also made in 2012, was used to
illustrate what Netanyahu says is the Palestinian history of using
holy sites in Jerusalem to incite violence against Jews.
It
is not known which sources Netanyahu used for his speech. A 1947 book
‘The Mufti of Jerusalem’ and a newspaper report at the time said
a former Hitler deputy had testified at the Nuremberg war crimes
trials that al-Husseini had plotted with the Nazi leader to rid
Europe of Jews.
Al-Husseini
was sought for war crimes but never appeared at the Nuremberg trials.
He later died in Cairo.
Netanyahu's
Tuesday comments come just days after Israeli Energy Minister Yuval
Steinitz accused Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas of “Nazi-like
incitement,” saying
he is the “number
one inciter in the world against Israel and the Jewish people.”
It
comes amid increased tensions between the two sides. Ten Israelis
have been killed in recent wave of stabbing attacks by Palestinians.
In that same time period, 46 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli
fire.
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu has come under fire for accusing the World War II Palestinian grand mufti of convincing Adolf Hitler to exterminate the Jews. The bold claim has been deemed incorrect by historians and Israeli opposition leaders.
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