Can you give an example of Muslim persecution of the Jews?
whilst i hold to the view that generally islamic rule was more beneficent than christian rule for jewish communities, there have been many times when this broke down, as this quote from a "history of the sephardic jews" (
http://www.orbilat.com/Languages/Spanish-Ladino/History/Ladino-History.htm ) suggests. this is also *relative*, by the way - i don't especially think that
dhimmi status would be much fun and, from what i've heard of the rhetoric of neo-khilafists, i don't think we would look forward to nearly as much protection as we have at the moment from secular democracy - albeit i am not exactly holding it up as a model of morality; as churchill said, "it's the worst option - until you look at all the others."
The situation, however, deteriorated again when soon after 1008 the Caliphate of Córdoba disintegrated into a lot of petty statelets (taifas), whih were unable to oppose the pressure of the northern Christian kingdoms. When Toledo fell to the Castilians (1085), the taifa kings had to call the Almoravids, a militarist Moorish sect from Morocco. The Almoravids believed that Jews must accept Islam if 500 years after the death of the Prophet Muhammad their Messiah had not come. A campaign to convert the Sephardim by force was launched in al-Andalus (the Muslim part of Spain), but the matters were arranged after a great ransom was paid. The Almoravids' intervention could stop only temporarily the Christians. In 1147 the Muslims of Spain had to appeal for help to the Almohads, Berber Muslim reformers of Northern Africa. Their arrival saved for once more time the Islam in Spain, but the Almohads attacked not only the Christians, but the Sephardim also. The Jewish communities of al-Andalus were destroyed and thousands of Jews were driven either to northern Spain and Provence or, as in the case of Maimonides' family, to North Africa and Egypt.
the most current persecution of jews from my point of view in this country being muslim-led, albeit with the enthusiastic participation of many left-wing non-muslims, namely what's going on at the school of oriental and african studies of the university of london and many other british universities at present. of course that's all supposed to be about israel, but on the receiving end of it it rather hard to tell the difference.
actually, i don't think it's particularly productive to bring all of this stuff up, it's only going to raise temperatures. however, nobody is helped by attempts to whitewash history - and that includes islamic history, i'm afraid. i'm not going to bring up stuff from the beginning of islam, because as far as i am aware that is a particular group of jews, not jews as a whole. unfortunately, i think i can see where you're going with this, having heard versions of it many times from various salafists and wahhabis. all i can say, sc_override, is that you should not take the "khilafa now" kind of approach as an example of how to have a good islamic relationship with jews - or indeed anyone.
as for the original question, how long is a piece of string? blaming "the other", jew, christian or muslim or whoever, is simply a method of avoiding taking responsibility for one's own actions. of course anti-semitism is a problem and should be fought, but it will probably exist until the messiah comes. however, i must take issue with this:
It's pretty simple really. What Jews call "anti-Semitism" is the inevitable negative social reaction Gentile groups will have to rejection of common social bonding mechanisms that human beings use to overcome group barriers in order to form larger and larger "family" identities, the basis of state and nation building.
- in other words, it's our own darn fault for maintaining the barriers of tradition and observance. i have to say that this is not just an attack on judaism, but an attack on any religion or anything that insists on borders between the permitted and the forbidden, or between one community and another. an example of this kind of thinking is the french ban on
hijab and other "ostentatious" religious dress in schools and this is a point of view that i condemn utterly as tantamount to secularist evangelism.
b'shalom
bananabrain