MUFTI HAJ AMIN EL-HUSSEINI
Haj Amin el-Husseini was the Mufti of Jerusalem between 1921-1937
and was in exile and in collaberation with the Nazis during the
years 1941-1945.
European Jews were the victims of Nazi anti-Semitism. However, this
racist philosophy applied to all members of the "Semitic race" -
including Arabs. The Nazi leadership expressed complete disdain
towards the Arabs and were confused by the efforts of el-Husseini,
to curry favor with Germany prior to the outbreak of World War II.
According to Arie Stav's article Arabs and Nazism, in OUTPOST,
January 1996:
"The Mufti Haj Amin el-Husseini was the equal of any of the war
criminals. In postwar testimony, a senior aide to Eichmann described
el-Husseini's appetite for destruction. He said that the Mufti visited
the Auschwitz gas chambers, in disguise, and reproved the Germans for
their lack of diligence in the destruction of the Jews. He loudly
protested the proposed Nazi deal to save 4,000 Bulgarian Jewish children
or to exchange trucks for Hungarian Jews.
The Mufti was never tried because the Allies were afraid of the storm
in the Arab world if its national hero were to be treated as a criminal.
The Mufti was received as a national hero in Egypt where he was among
the sponsors of the 1948 war. Indeed, the Mufti represents the link
connecting the two attempts to destroy the Jews, that of the Nazis and
that of the Arabs. It is thus not surprising that the Mufti has a lofty
place in the PLO's pantheon. Arafat saw the Mufti as an educator and
leader, declaring in 1985 that he deemed it an honor to walk in his
footsteps. Arafat stressed that the PLO continued to march in the path
carved out by the Mufti."
Additional References
The Mufti of Berlin –
Arab-Nazi collaboration is a taboo topic in the West (Wallstreet Journal)
Amin Al-Husseini
Photos and Documents
On the Restoration of Israel
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