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Saturday, August 29, 2009

Zionist Hate Crime in Germany

Zionist Lies Nazify Palestinian History

Zionists never let up from their effort to rewrite history and control discourse

Zionist Indoctrination: Boston Grammar Schools discusses the Zionist effort to brainwash my daughter and her fellow 2nd-graders. I address the malicious and defamatory Zionist eqation of Palestinians and Palestinian leaders with Nazis in Makdisi Overlooks US Journalistic Nazification. The August 28th Jerusalem Post story entitled Hiding the Truth about Husseini (reproduced below) augments the latest Zionist big lie effort to spread this calumny about Palestinians throughout Germany.

Here is my letter of support to Multicultural Center Director Philippa Ebéné, who threw a wrench into this newest Zionist disinformation campaign.

Dear Philippa Ebéné:

I read Benjamin Weinthal's JPost article about the Multicultural Center's exhibit entitled "The Third World during the Second World War." He writes:

The publicly funded Multicultural Center's (Werkstatt der Kulturen) decision to remove educational panels of the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Hajj Muhammad Amin al-Husseini, who was an ally of Adolf Hitler, from a planned exhibit, sparked outrage on Thursday among a district mayor, the curator of the exhibit, and the Berlin Jewish community.

The famous photo of Adolf...

The famous photo of Adolf Hitler sitting with Grand Mufti Hajj Muhammad Amin al-Husseini.

The curator, Karl Rössler, told The Jerusalem Post that it is a "scandal" that the director of the Werkstatt, Philippa Ebéné, sought to censor the exhibit.

"One must, of course, name that al-Husseini, a SS functionary, participated in the Holocaust," said Rössler.

The exhibit covers the "The Third World during the Second World War" and three exhibit panels of 96 are devoted to the mufti's collaboration with the Nazis.

I am glad that you removed the "Mufti-collaboration" panels.

I am an Eastern European and Jewish studies expert, who runs an educational organization in Boston.

I have often been puzzled by the claim that "the Mufti of Jerusalem ... helped [the Nazis] raise an SS division in Bosnia" because he spoke neither Serbo-Croation nor German.

Without a doubt, the Bosnian (Bosnyak) `ulama could read Arabic as well as recite Arabic prayers, and, of course, some of the older local ulama (Islamic scholars) may have been able to speak Turkish, which al-Husseini spoke in addition to Arabic. Yet the best and most linguistically proficient Islamic scholars had long been emigrating from the region with the "encouragement" of the Serb-dominated government.

As far as I can tell, al-Husseini spent most of his time in Yugoslavia with a N. African Arabic regiment that had more or less been conscripted to fight alongside the Wehrmacht in E. Europe, and I am not sure that dispatching al-Husseini to one of the most difficult fronts of WW2 indicated that he had much favor from Hitler or high-ranking government officials.

There is no evidence that the Mufti sympathized with the German Nazis except insofar as they were willing to help him drive Eastern and Central European Zionist invaders out of Palestine.

You can find my blog entry on Zionist-Nazi collaboration at Nazi-Zionist Friendship Commemorative Medal. My article Starting a Citation Chain? discusses the Zionist propagandist Joseph Schechtman, who is the source of collaboration accusations against al-Husseini. I have a blog entry addressing Weinthal's tendency to distortion: Factoidalism at Haaretz.

Even though keeping Zionist propaganda out your exhibition is commendable, there would certainly be value in an exhibition addressing collaboration and alliance during WW2 honestly. Such an exhibit could address why Finland allied with Nazi Germany, the nature of the Soviet Regime, actions of liberated Soviet nationalities, Soviet and Polish Tatar Muslims fighting against Germany, Polish Tatar Jews serving in German-sponsored units, and the attempts of both Zionists and the Palestinian resistance to obtain German support.

There is no reason not to respect all soldiers that fought honorably.

I once visited an Alsatian church, which had a plague commemorating congregants, who had been killed while serving in the army since the founding of the church. The plaque did not mention on which side a soldier fought.

North Africans conscripted to fight with the Wehrmacht during WW2 definitely deserve to be memorialized as do German soldiers that fought with honor for the German homeland. While Hitler and Stalin were monsters, no one should assume that every soldier fighting for Germany or the Soviet Union was evil or unworthy of respect.

Sincerely yours,

Joachim Martillo
President
Boston, MA
USA

Please send Philippa Ebéné an email of support. Below is the original JPost article.

Please note that Benjamin Weinthal, Karl Rössler, the UferHallen Gallery, Maya Zehden, and Heinz Buschkowsky are using lies and defamation to incite hatred against Palestinians, Arabs, and Muslims. These people and the Gallery are thus involved in the commission of a serious hate crime under German law. The German Police should start arresting the perpetrators, shut down the UferHallen Gallery, and seize this criminal exhibit. In the aftermath of the Marwa al-Sherbini murder, Germany has a duty to act swiftly against the Zionist, Arabophobic, and Islamophobic hate-mongers.

The Jerusalem Post Internet Edition

Hiding the truth about Husseini

Aug. 28, 2009
BENJAMIN WEINTHAL, Jpost correspondent in berlin , THE JERUSALEM POST

The publicly funded Multicultural Center's (Werkstatt der Kulturen) decision to remove educational panels of the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Hajj Muhammad Amin al-Husseini, who was an ally of Adolf Hitler, from a planned exhibit, sparked outrage on Thursday among a district mayor, the curator of the exhibit, and the Berlin Jewish community.

The curator, Karl Rössler, told The Jerusalem Post that it is a "scandal" that the director of the Werkstatt, Philippa Ebéné, sought to censor the exhibit.

"One must, of course, name that al-Husseini, a SS functionary, participated in the Holocaust," said Rössler.

The exhibit covers the "The Third World during the Second World War" and three exhibit panels of 96 are devoted to the mufti's collaboration with the Nazis.

The grand mufti delivered a talk to the imams of the Bosnian SS division in 1944, and was a key Islamic supporter of Nazi Germany's destruction of European Jewry.

Ebéné denied that there was an "agreement " reached with the local German-Muslim community to shut down the exhibit. She termed media queries regarding an agreement as "Eurocentric."

She told the Post that the exhibit was intended as a "homage to soldiers from African" countries who fought against the Nazis.

When asked about her opposition to the inclusion of the mufti panels, she asked, "was there ever a commemoration event in Israel to honor the [African] soldiers?"

Rössler was notified last Friday that Ebéné wanted to take out the panels dealing with the grand mufti, but he rejected her demand to remove them.

Meanwhile, the exhibit in its uncensored version has been relocated to the UferHallen gallery.

Maya Zehden, a spokeswoman for the 12,000-strong Berlin Jewish community, told the Post that Ebéné's rejection of the exhibit showed "intolerance," and a director who is "incapable of acting in a democratic" manner.

Zehden urged that the Berlin government consider replacing Ebéné as director. Zehden also sharply criticized Günter Piening, Berlin's commissioner for integration and migration, for defending Ebéné's decision to censor the exhibit.

Piening told the large daily Tagesspiegel that, "We need, in a community like Neukölln, a differentiated presentation of the involvement of the Arabic world in the Second World War."

Zehden termed his statement "an appeasement attempt" to ignore the fact that "there was no official resistance from the Arabic world against the persecution of Jews" during the Shoah.

She accused Piening of showing a false tolerance to German-Arabs in the neighborhood by not wanting to deal with disturbances from the local community.

Piening issued conflicting statements to the Post. While denying his statement to the Tagesspiegel, he said, however, that his comment was stripped out of a context of quotes.

He said the "reason" for the removal of the grand mufti panels dealt with a "misunderstanding of the background of the exhibit."

In an e-mail to the Post, Heinz Buschkowsky, the district mayor in Neukölln, where the exhibit was originally planned, wrote, it is a sign of "anticipatory obedience to avoid probable protests. I do not consider this position to be good."

He added that Piening's statement is a "repression of the facts dealing with anti-Semitism."

The district mayor wrote that the center by its own "claim to stand for freedom, tolerance, and culture should be careful not to set off suspicion that it is imposing censorship."


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