By Sameer Arshad
Khatlani
Oct 10,
2020
It was
perhaps no coincidence that on September 4, an imam at Mecca’s Grand Mosque
dwelt on Prophet Mohammed’s kindness to a Jewish neighbour. The reference, days
before the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Bahrain signed agreements on September 15
to normalise ties with Israel, was seen as part of the groundwork for other
Arab nations such as Saudi Arabia to follow suit. The thaw in Arab-Israel
relations is a culmination of years of behind-the-scenes work that Arab leaders
have been hinting at. Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, in 2018,
backed the Israelis’ “right to have their own land”. Bahrain defended Israeli
airstrikes in Syria the same year, saying Israel “has the right to defend
itself”. A year later, Bahraini foreign minister Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa called
Israel a part of the region’s heritage.
The
euphoria over the normalisation of Israel’s ties with its neighbours should not
take the focus away from the need for Israel to end its policies of
dispossessing Palestinians. This is the only way to ensure a durable peace in
the region (REUTERS)
-----
Bin Salman
and Khalifa’s sentiments sound extraordinary given how the expulsion of
hundreds of thousands of Palestinians for Israel’s creation in 1948 blighted
Jewish-Arab relations. But the seven-decade schism is a blip when seen from the
perspective of centuries of cordial ties dating back to the rise of Islam. Jews
thrived under the Abbasid Empire, the greatest that the Arabs have helmed that
ushered in Islam’s Golden Age on the back of acceptance, openness, scholarship,
and science. Caliph Al-Mansur laid the ceremonial first brick for Baghdad’s
foundation as the Empire’s capital on July 30, 762, only after his astrologers,
including a Jew, chose it as the most auspicious for work on the city to begin
at the site Nestorian Christian monks suggested to him.
Jewish
religious scholarship flourished in Abbasid Baghdad. Jews had their own schools
where Hebrew was taught. Baghdad once boasted of 10 rabbinical schools and 22
synagogues. Benjamin of Tudela, a 12th-century Spanish rabbi who visited
Baghdad as part of an odyssey to the most storied cities globally, called the
Caliph “kind unto Israel”, and well-versed in its laws.
This is not
surprising, as Muslims believe Islam is an extension of the Abrahamic traditions
represented by Judaism and Christianity. The three religions trace their
origins to Abraham. Early Muslims prayed in the direction of Jerusalem, the
city Muslims, Christians, and Jews consider to be holy.
Jews found
refuge in Muslim lands when papal ascendancy in medieval Europe led to
religious repression, or inquisitions, from the 13th to the 15th century. Jews
were banished from England and France in the 14th century, and from Spain in
1492. The last Caliphate — Ottoman — welcomed Spanish Jews fleeing the Catholic
Inquisition. Jews participated in the government under Ottoman rule, thanks to
the modernising Tanzimat (re-ordering) administrative, military, educational,
legal, and social reforms in the 19th century. The reforms required provincial
administrative councils to reflect local religious diversity. Menahim Salih
Efendi Daniyal, a Jew, was among the four sent from Baghdad to the first
Ottoman parliament in 1877–78. Sasson Efendi Hasqail, another Jew, was elected
to the parliament twice from the city.
Jewish-Arab
relations deteriorated after Britain promised the Zionist movement a national
home — Israel — in Palestine through the Balfour Declaration of 1917. The
pledge rode roughshod over the native Arabs, who accounted for 90% of the
Palestinian population. The British colonialists regulated migration to
Palestine over the following decades and increased the Jewish population there
from 9% in 1922 to 27% in 1935. They dispossessed Palestinians by carrying out
demolitions under the garb of “urban regeneration”. The Nakba (catastrophe)
struck when an estimated 750,000 Palestinians were forced out of their homes in
1948 with Israel’s creation that triggered the first of the Arab-Israeli wars.
The
euphoria over the normalisation of Israel’s ties with its neighbours, however,
should not take the focus away from the need for Israel to end its policies of
dispossessing Palestinians. This is the only way to ensure a durable peace in
the region.
Original Headline: The history of Jewish-Arab
harmony
Source: The Hindustan Times
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-pluralism/muslims-believe-islam-extension-abrahamic/d/123129
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