Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Roots of Islam fundamentalism lie in Nazi propaganda for Arab world

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Roots of Islam fundamentalism lie in Nazi propaganda for Arab world

    Roots of Islamic fundamentalism lie in Nazi propaganda for Arab world, book
    claims

    The roots of Islamic fanaticism can be traced to Adolf Hitler's radio
    messages broadcast around the Arab world during the Second World War,
    according to a new book.

    By Allan Hall in Berlin
    © Copyright of Telegraph Media Group Limited 2010

    21 Apr 2010


    "Your only hope for rescue is the destruction of the Jews before they
    destroy you!" Hitler said in a 1942 message, one of thousands broadcast
    across the Middle East in an attempt to woo the Arab world.

    In a broadcast aimed at provoking an anti-Semitic uprising in Egypt, he
    said: "A large number of Jews who live in Egypt, along with Poles, Greeks,
    Armenians and Frenchmen, have guns and ammunition.

    "Some Jews in Cairo have even asked the British authorities to set up
    machine guns on the roofs of their houses," he claimed.
    But the Nazi's wartime broadcasts had remained a largely hidden chapter in
    the history of the war until the transmissions were unearthed by a US
    scholar, who believes they have fuelled continuing unrest in the Middle
    East.

    "The conflict between Israel and the Palestinians would have been over long
    ago were it not for the uncompromising, religiously inspired hatred of the
    Jews that was articulated and given assistance by Nazi propagandists and
    continued after the war by Islamists of various sorts," said Jeffrey Herf, a
    history professor at the University of Maryland.

    In his new book, "Nazi Propaganda for the Arab World", Mr Herf argues that
    Nazi propagandists offered a message that neatly dovetailed with underlying
    prejudice.

    "Islamic fundamentalism, like European totalitarianism in the 20th century,
    was and is a mixture of very old and very modern elements.
    "It is also a product of a mixture of some indigenous currents in the
    history of Islam with the hatred of democracy, liberalism and the Jews that
    were so central to National Socialism.

    Mr Herf uncovered 6,000 transmissions, produced under the propaganda
    minister Josef Goebbels and sent around the Arab world from 1939 to 1945.

    The transcripts of the broadcasts were made by the American embassy in Cairo
    during the war, and classified until 1977 in Washington. But it was not
    until two years ago that Mr Herf became the first scholar to be given access
    to the files.

    The Nazis relied on radio broadcasts - translated into Arabic - to sow
    propaganda because of high illiteracy in the Arab world at the time.
    Although radio ownership was small, it was commonplace for cafes and bazaars
    to draw large crowds to listen to broadcasts.

    "This propaganda campaign comprised an important chapter in the history of
    the war," Mr Herf said.

    "The Arab language propaganda produced in wartime Berlin was a significant
    chapter in the longer history of radical Arab nationalism and militant
    Islam."
Working...
X