By Alan Caruba
I read
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s recent call to European Jews
to move to Israel in the wake of the attacks in Paris and in Copenhagen.
“Israel is your home. We are preparing and calling for the absorption of mass
immigration from Europe,” was Netanyahu’s message to those considering leaving
their home nations.
By 2012
about 43% of the world’s Jewish community lived in Israel, making it the
country with the largest Jewish population. The bulk of the rest of the world’s
Jewish population lives in the United States and the remainder are scattered
among other nations.
When it
declared its sovereignty in 1948 Israel quickly filled with Jewish immigrants
from the surrounding Arab nations that made it clear they were not welcome even
if their families had lived there for generations. Now they are extending their
hatred to Arab Christians.
These days
Israel’s population numbers 7,821,850. For years Israel has been welcoming
Jewish immigrants from nations that include Russia, Ethiopia, Ukraine, and
France; even some from the U.S. As incidences of anti-Semitism increase in
Europe, Netanyahu’s invitation is being answered by more Jews seeking a respite
from the hatred they are encountering.
In the
U.S., unless you live in a major urban center or its suburbs, you are not likely
to encounter too many Jews. According to the 2015 World Almanac and Book of
Facts® there are 5,439,000 Jews in North America and 13,862,000 worldwide.
So why are
we witnessing attacks on Jews? Writing in The Wall Street Journal on January
15, 2015, Ruth R. Wisse, a former professor of Yiddish and comparative
literature at Harvard, warned that “If we mistakenly imagine that this is
‘about’ Jews, however, we fall into the trap that anti-Semitism sets for us by
deflecting attention from perpetrators to victims.”
“The trail
of terror leads not to the Jews but from those who organize against them…In
every case, Jews are convenient targets standing in for the liberalizing
aspects of individual freedom, democratic governance and modernity complete
with its anxieties. Anti-Jewish politics aims at the tolerant societies in
which Jews flourish.”
Therein
lays the danger in President Obama’s resistance to identifying the terrorists
and acts of terrorism around the world as fundamentally Islamic. Do all Muslims
hate Jews? Probably not, but enough do to support radical Islamism in the
millions and their hatred extends to Christians and all other infidels,
unbelievers.
One thing
is for sure. As reported on June 3, 2014 in The Wall Street Journal, “from 2010
to 2013, the number of jihadist groups worldwide has grown by 58%, to 49 from
31; the number of jihadist fighters has doubled to a high estimate of 100,000;
and the number of attacks by al Qaeda affiliates has increased to roughly 1,000
from 392.” Those numbers are increasing.
CNS
News.com reported in November 2014 that “The number of people killed by
terrorists worldwide in 2013 rose by 60% compared to the previous year—from
11,133 to 17,958—with four Sunni Muslim extremists groups responsible for
two-thirds of all fatalities” according to the Global Terrorism Index, a
project of the Institute for Economics and Peace.
The
failure to defeat the jihadist groups can only lead to the increasing danger of
an attack on the U.S. homeland, but it will also ensure that such attacks occur
throughout Europe, Africa and the Middle East wherever there are large Muslim
populations.
On
September 29, 2014, Prime Minister Netanyahu addressed the United Nations
General Assembly. “It’s not militants. It’s not Islam. It’s militant Islam.
Typically its first victims are other Muslims, but it spares no one.
Christians, Jews, Yazidis, Kurds—no creed, no faith, no ethnic group is beyond
its sights. And it’s rapidly spreading in every part of the world. You know the
famous American saying, ‘All politics is local’? For militant Islamists, ‘All
politics is global’ because their ultimate goal is to dominate the world.”
When
Netanyahu addresses the U.S. Congress next month, his message will surely be
the same, but with one difference. He will focus on the insane prospect of an
Iran, the source of terrorist acts against the U.S., since the Beirut bombing
of our Marine barracks there in 1983.
What Obama
does not grasp is that Netanyahu wants the U.S. to cease its insane support for
a nuclear Iran. He wants to protect his nation, but what he also wants to do is to save Iranian
lives because Iran will not be permitted to reach a point where it can
annihilate Israel.
This goes
beyond the anti-Semitism that has flourished for millennia and goes straight to
the question of whether Israel and the U.S. can survive an inevitable attack
and whether the rest of the world can avoid slipping into a new Dark Age rooted in the
seventh century.
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