The Jerusalem Post

Hamas’s perversion of Islam

- • By YAKOV NAGEN The writer, a rabbi, is the director of Ohr Torah Stone’s Blickle Institute for Interfaith Dialogue.

For the Jewish people, the Sabbath of October 7 was our darkest hour since the Holocaust. The Hamas perpetrate­d unspeakabl­e horrors reawakenin­g past traumas. To justice and sanctify these atrocities, they invoke their religion.

This deeply challenges those, such as myself, who believe that mutual respect and understand­ing between Jews and Muslims can help build a better future for all. Can we reconcile the painful current reality with this vision?

Healing relations between Muslims and Jews is my life’s work, and as an Orthodox rabbi living in Israel, I believe that appreciati­on of the deep identity of the other can build a joint future.

I have come to understand, as the late Rabbi Jonathan Sacks said, that the term “fundamenta­lists” to describe violent extremists is a misnomer, for these are precisely the people who most violate the fundamenta­ls of their religion.

What greater blasphemy can there be than committing atrocities in the name of God? But how is it that religion can be so perverted? My friend, Imam Talib Shareef, insightful­ly explained, “Religion is power, and power corrupts.”

What empowers Hamas and allows it to thrive is that too many have accepted their corruption of the teachings of a world religion. Too many more know better but remain silent. Both of these groups are complicit in the massacre that began this Saturday.

But there are those who have spoken out. Hundreds of Muslim leaders signed a public statement issued by the Global Imams Council (GIC) unequivoca­lly condemning the massacre. In the condemnati­on, they refer to a legal ruling issued by the Islamic Fatwa Council, located in the Iraqi spiritual capital of Najaf: “It is prohibited to pray for, join, support, finance, or fight on behalf of Hamas.”

fatwacounc­il.org/2023/03/09/ hamasfatwa/

The ruling enumerated 11 correlatio­ns between Hamas and ISIS, including the use of suicide bombers, missile attacks against civilians, and genocidal aspiration­s, in the case of Hamas annihilati­ng the Jews. The fatwa was issued in March, prior to the massacres. Its focus is on how Hamas’s corruption and crimes are a violation of Islam and a source of the suffering of the Palestinia­ns in Gaza.

And Palestinia­ns will, indeed, suffer. In response to the murderous massacres, Israel has no choice but to wage war against

Hamas. The suffering this will cause is the responsibi­lity of Hamas and their apologists. The October 7 massacre was thus a triple crime – against Jews in Israel, against Islam, and against Palestinia­ns in Gaza.

One example of Hamas’s sacrilege is the cynical way they use al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem as a pretext for murder and terror. This is an Orwellian inversion of reality. During last Ramadan, Hamas activists fired fireworks inside the mosque.

This left Israeli security no choice but to intervene, providing a pretext for Hamas to claim that the mosque had

been violated, which in turn justified the murder spree they then launched, killing, among others, the wife and daughters of my friend Leo Dee. They have named the current campaign of massacres the “al-Aqsa Flood” as if it were a response to the mosque’s violation.

The use of al-Aqsa to justify the massacre of Jews is profoundly sacrilegio­us. In fact, al-Aqsa Mosque should be a symbol of the close, even intimate relationsh­ip between Islam and Judaism. It is an inversion of what should be the meaning and significan­ce of the fact that al-Aqsa Mosque is located on Judaism’s holiest site, the Temple Mount. This is where, according to Muslim tradition, Mohammad received the commandmen­t of prayer.

A reference to al-Aqsa first appears in the 17th surah (chapter) of the Quran, and is part of the basis for identifyin­g its location as Jerusalem in that the surah then speaks of the Children of Israel and of the ancient Temple. The term al-Aqsa means “the farthest.” This nomenclatu­re is moving from a Jewish perspectiv­e as the Bible tells that upon the dedication of the Temple, King Solomon asked God to listen from that site also to prayers of the non-Jews who have come from a “far land.”

The Quran’s account of Mohammad’s journey to the farthest mosque could be seen as a response to this prayer.

From both a Jewish and Muslim perspectiv­e, the site should be embraced as a center of connection. For centuries, the link between the ancient temple and the mosque was a source of pride for many Muslims.

Coins have been discovered that were minted by the Umayyad Caliphate in the 7th and 8th centuries, featuring the image of the seven-branched candelabru­m from the Temple. The tragic contempora­ry reality is that Hamas promotes a denial that there ever was a Jewish Temple and regards Jews who enter or pray anywhere on the Temple Mount as defiling it.

For the sake of humanity, for the sake of God, people of all faiths must break the silence and speak out against those forces that have corrupted religion to bring evil to the world. All must call for a return to the fundamenta­ls taught by major world religions: a shared and sacred humanity, responsibi­lities to the wellbeing of the other, a teaching which, if fulfilled, can bring blessing and healing to our broken world.

 ?? (Jamal Awad/Flash90) ?? MUSLIMS ARRIVE for Friday prayers at al-Aqsa Mosque compound earlier this month. Al-Aqsa should be a symbol of the close, even intimate relationsh­ip between Islam and Judaism, the writer maintains.
(Jamal Awad/Flash90) MUSLIMS ARRIVE for Friday prayers at al-Aqsa Mosque compound earlier this month. Al-Aqsa should be a symbol of the close, even intimate relationsh­ip between Islam and Judaism, the writer maintains.

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