Bangkok Post

Saudis warming up to Jews

From conciliato­ry sermons by imams to more tolerance in textbooks, Riyadh is changing its stance towards a long-time enemy but a detente is still far away,

- writes Anuj Chopra

‘‘ When it comes to Saudi Arabia and Israel establishi­ng relations, it’s a question of ‘when’, not ‘if’.

MARC SCHNEIER RABBI

From scrubbing hate-filled school textbooks to a taboo-defying religious sermon, Saudi Arabia is pushing for another kind of normalisat­ion after declining to establish formal relations with Israel — co-existence with Jews. Saudi Arabia has said it will not follow its allies Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates in establishi­ng diplomatic relations without a resolution to the Palestinia­n issue, even as it cultivates clandestin­e ties with the Jewish state.

Having Saudi Arabia, an Arab powerhouse and epicentre of Islam, forge a similar deal would be the ultimate diplomatic prize for Israel but the kingdom is wary that its citizens — sympatheti­c to the Palestinia­n cause — may not be ready for a full embrace.

Saudi Arabia, however, is pushing to change public perception­s about Jews with a risky outreach to a community that has long been vilified by the kingdom’s clerical establishm­ent and media, laying the groundwork for an eventual recognitio­n.

School textbooks, once well known for denigratin­g Jews and other non-Muslims as “swines” and “apes”, are undergoing revision as part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s campaign to combat extremism in education, officials say.

“The Saudi government has also decided to prohibit the disparagem­ent of Jews and Christians in mosques,” said Saudi analyst Najah al-Otaibi.

“Anti-Jewish rhetoric was common at Friday prayers of the imams in mosques used to address Muslims around the world.”

In a stunning U-turn, a preacher in the holy city of Mecca triggered a social media storm this month when he spoke of Prophet Mohammed’s friendly relations with Jews to advocate religious tolerance.

The sermon was by Abdulrahma­n al-Sudais, the imam of Mecca’s Grand Mosque who courted controvers­y in the past for strongly anti-Semitic views.

Mohammed al-Issa, a Saudi cleric who heads the Muslim World League, won praise from Israel in January after he travelled to Poland for events marking 75 years since the Nazi death camp Auschwitz was liberated.

Earlier this year, the kingdom announced the screening of a Holocaust-themed film for the first time at a movie festival, before it was cancelled due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The kingdom has also pursued a bold outreach to Jewish figures, including in February when King Salman hosted a Jerusalemb­ased rabbi, David Rosen, for the first time in modern history.

“When it comes to Saudi Arabia and Israel establishi­ng relations, it is a question of ‘when,’ not ‘if,’” said Marc Schneier, an American rabbi with close relations to Gulf rulers.

“Part of the process that all Gulf countries have and are going through on the road to normalisat­ion is first pushing warmer ties between Muslims and Jews and then moving more boldly into discussing Israel and the Gulf.”

Arab News, the kingdom’s main English-language daily, whipped up a social media storm at the weekend when it briefly changed its social media banner on Twitter and Facebook with a greeting in Hebrew for Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year.

The newspaper recently published a lengthy series on the Jews of Lebanon, and plans a similar instalment on an ancient Jewish community that lived in what is today Saudi Arabia.

Its editor, Faisal Abbas, said the coverage “was not tied to Israel” but aimed at connecting with “Arab Jews worldwide”.

The coverage marks a departure for tightly controlled media in the absolute monarchy.

Saudi media outlets have previously branded the Jewish state as the “Zionist” enemy but largely hailed the recent deals struck with the UAE and Bahrain.

Fuelling speculatio­n about quietly warming relations with Israel were two television dramas on the Saudi-controlled MBC network during this year’s fasting month of Ramadan.

In a controvers­ial scene in one of the shows, “Exit 7”, one Saudi character brushes aside the taboo of doing business with Israel, saying Palestinia­ns are the real “enemy” for insulting the kingdom “day and night” despite decades of support.

The moves indicate that the kingdom is not opposed to normalisat­ion with the Jewish state after having resolutely supported the Palestinia­ns politicall­y and financiall­y for decades, observers say.

But Israel formalisin­g relations with unelected Arab government­s “is not the same as Israel making ‘peace’ with Arab people”, said Giorgio Cafiero, the chief executive of Gulf State Analytics.

Data from a rare Saudi public opinion poll published last month by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy suggests many Saudi citizens are not in favour of a deal.

Despite the Saudi media outreach to Israelis and Jews, “a mere nine percent of Saudis” agreed that people in favour of business or sports contacts with Israelis should be allowed to do so, according to the Institute’s David Pollock.

“What peace? Peace after all that [Israel] has done, killing and war?” said Bader, a young Saudi citizen in Riyadh. “It’s difficult for this to happen between [Saudis and Israelis]. I won’t support it.”

 ??  ?? Mohammed: Toning down extremism
Mohammed: Toning down extremism

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