THE PALESTINIANS’ NAZI HERITAGE
With the nations of Europe and the rest of the world lining up to support the PLO bid to receive non-member state status at the UN General Assembly, it is worth noting two anniversaries of related but forgotten events.
Of course, everyone in Israel knows the obvious anniversary today -- Nov. 29, 1947 was the day the UN General Assembly passed the plan to recommend the partition of the British Mandate of Palestine into a Jewish state and an Arab state. The Jews accepted the plan. The Arabs -- both local and regional - rejected it.
On November 28, 1941 the religious and political leader of the Palestinian Arabs and one of the most influential leaders of the Arab world, the "Grand Mufti," Haji Amin al Husseini met with Adolf Hitler in Berlin. Husseini had courted the Nazis since just after the Nazis rose to power in 1933. He was forced to flee the British Mandate in 1937 when he expanded his fourth terror war against the Jews, that he began in 1936 to include the British as well.
In 1920 Husseini personally invented what later became known as the Palestinian national movement. He shaped its identity around the sole cause of destroying the Jewish presence in the land of Israel. (Note: The story of how Husseini came to be Grand Mufti is told by Jack Wheeler in The English Godfather of Palestinian Terrorism, December 2003.)
During World War II, Husseini used his radio broadcasts to shape the political and religious consciousness of the Moslem world by fusing Islamic Jew hatred with annihilationist Nazi anti-Semitism. Whereas much of the Nazi anti-Semitic ideology was discredited in postwar Europe, it has remained the single most resonant theme of Arab politics for 66 years.



