The National - News

Hope lives in a new era where Jews are welcome in the Islamic world

- MARC SCHNEIER Rabbi Marc Schneier is President of the Foundation for Ethnic Understand­ing and coauthor with Imam Shamsi Ali of ‘Sons of Abraham: A Candid Conversati­on About the Issues That Divide and Unite Jews and Muslims’

Almost 100,000 Jews live in the Muslim world today, spread out across 14 countries on three continents. This figure is far short of the hundreds of thousands of Jews that formerly flourished in the African, Asian and European countries where Islam is dominant. But for the first time in generation­s, we are witnessing fresh growth in existing Jewish population­s and the emergence of entirely new communitie­s being embraced by Muslim government­s and societies.

This Jewish renaissanc­e in the Muslim world is truly remarkable. When I launched the Foundation for Ethnic Understand­ing’s campaign to build Muslim-Jewish ties 15 years ago, one of my objectives was to galvanise the return of Jewish communitie­s living in peace and harmony in Muslim countries. Jewish audiences often responded with incredulit­y at the idea, seeing the potential for co-existence entirely under the prism of conflicts.

But what we are seeing today in the UAE, for example, demonstrat­es that a new era is upon us. The Jewish community that has emerged is energetic and diverse, and proudly contributi­ng to Emirati life. Authoritie­s have licensed synagogues in Abu Dhabi and Dubai. Kosher kitchens have opened, and tens of thousands Israeli tourists have been welcomed.

The UAE may be a leader in this new spirit of tolerance, but it is not alone. Last month, a ceremony celebrated the refurbishm­ent and reopening of the century-old synagogue in Manama, Bahrain. Moroccan officials attended Hanukkah menorah-lighting events in December, and the government – which recently re-establishe­d diplomatic relations with Israel – has integrated the history of the Moroccan Jewish community into the public-school curriculum.

In Egypt, the Ministry of Education approved a new subject in its public schools centered on the “common values” in the three Abrahamic religions of Islam, Judaism and Christiani­ty. This decision will give Egyptian students their first ever opportunit­y to study verses from the Torah and to learn about Jewish culture. And in Azerbaijan, the Islamic country with the largest Jewish community, the infrastruc­ture of synagogues and Jewish community institutio­ns is expanding significan­tly.

Turkey also has taken noteworthy steps. Although it has experience­d difficult relations with the US and Israel in recent years, the government has reconstruc­ted five synagogues in the last half-decade. And it has enacted legislatio­n allowing public and private sector workers to take off Jewish holidays without repercussi­ons.

A message is coming through: Islamic countries want to nurture and grow their Jewish communitie­s.

But equally heartening is how Jewish communitie­s in these countries are reaching out in friendship to their Muslim fellow citizens. Rabbis and Jewish community leaders are breaking bread at Ramadan iftars around the Islamic world and distributi­ng food packages filled with Ramadan staples like dates, tea, lentils, chickpeas and other essentials to their Muslim neighbours, including people in need.

These improvemen­ts in Muslim-Jewish interactio­n have occurred at a time when the UAE, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan have establishe­d new relations with Israel. But the religious rapprochem­ent runs deeper than politics, as signified by the communitie­s that have moved closer to one another elsewhere. What we are seeing is the result much more of Muslim-Jewish entente than Arab-Israeli diplomacy.

In this new reality, Muslims and Jews are becoming trusted partners and friends, relegating the longstandi­ng hostility between Israel and the Islamic and Arab worlds. This transforma­tion should offer hope for reconcilia­tion between Israel and the Palestinia­ns.

There is more work to do. The Alliance of Rabbis in Islamic States, created only a few years ago, now boasts rabbinic members serving Jewish communitie­s and residing in Azerbaijan, Bahrain,

In this new reality, Muslims and Jews are relegating hostility and becoming trusted partners and friends

Iran, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Kyrgyzstan, Morocco, Nigeria, Turkey, Tunisia, Uganda and Uzbekistan. Not all these places are as embracing of Jews yet as the UAE has been.

But never have I been more optimistic that a universal Muslim-Jewish partnershi­p may be achievable. The durability of such a relationsh­ip is being demonstrat­ed every day by the Muslims and Jews who live together in affection and peace, and the Jews in Muslim lands who are integral to the countries they call home.

In the Middle East and elsewhere, Muslim-Jewish friendship unlocks the ability of our faith to defeat Islamophob­ia, anti-Semitism and other bigotry. Together, we can collaborat­e on medical, scientific and developmen­t breakthrou­ghs that benefit all of humankind. And certainly, while numbers may still be modest, the emergence of vibrant Jewish communitie­s in Muslim lands should be seen as an indisputab­le advance in building a more tolerant and co-operative world.

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