by Steven Emerson
Jews were expelled from Europe "because they betrayed, stole and corrupted these countries," a senior Hamas official said Friday. Mahmoud Al-Zahar predicted Jews face a similar fate in Israel.
"But they have no place here amongst us because of their crimes," the Jerusalem Post's  Khaled Abu Toameh quotes Zahar saying. "They will soon be expelled from  here and we will pray at the Aqsa Mosque [in Jerusalem]."
It's bluster, but Zahar's comments call  for the elimination of an existing state and the death or exile of  millions of Jews. They clearly cross the line between criticizing Israel  and rank anti-Semitism. As such, they should be condemned by Muslim  organizations which claim to stand against bigotry.
Had the roles been reversed and an  Israeli official predicted Palestinians "will soon be expelled from  here," the chorus of condemnation would be unyielding and  understandable. But Zahar's remarks aren't even generating a discussion,  certainly not from the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).
Like the Muslim Public Affairs Council  and other American Islamist groups, CAIR is quick to demand  condemnations for statements they consider bigoted or intolerant of  Muslims. MPAC and CAIR  have specific programs to highlight cases of what they call  "Islamophobia." But they tend to hold their tongues when a Muslim leader  engages in hate speech.
Comments far less threatening or bigoted  send the American Islamist outrage machine into overdrive. After news  analyst Juan Williams admitted feeling anxiety traveling with some  Muslim passengers, CAIR last month demanded  that NPR "address the fact that one of its news analysts seems to  believe that all airline passengers who are perceived to be Muslim can  legitimately be viewed as security threats."
Williams was fired.
But don't expect much when the roles are  reversed. Helen Thomas, the venerable White House correspondent who  resigned shortly after issuing a call similar to Zahar's – that Jews  should "go home" to Germany, Poland and "get the hell out of Palestine" –  has been honored by two national organizations since then.
The Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee and CAIR  gave Thomas awards, though each group claims the move was more of a  lifetime achievement recognition and not an endorsement of her comments.
Similarly, CAIR stays silent on  anti-Semitic rantings by Muslim Brotherhood spiritual guide Yusuf  al-Qaradawi, who advocates for terrorist attacks against American troops and Israeli civilians. CAIR's references to Qaradawi hold him up as a "renowned Muslim scholar" and a moderate. Last month, Qaradawi boycotted an interfaith meeting because Jews were participating.
In 2009, he cast the Holocaust as Allah's punishment against Jews.  "Throughout history," Qaradawi said, Allah has imposed upon the [Jews]  people who would punish them for their corruption. The last punishment  was carried out by Hitler. By means of all the things he did to them –  even though they exaggerated this issue – he managed to put them in  their place. This was divine punishment for them. Allah willing, the  next time will be at the hand of the believers."
A few days earlier, Qaradawi said his  dying dream was to die shooting Israelis. "I'd like to say that the only  thing I hope for is that as my life approaches its end, Allah will give  me an opportunity to go to the land of Jihad and resistance, even if in  a wheelchair. I will shoot Allah's enemies, the Jews, and they will  throw a bomb at me, and thus, I will seal my life with martyrdom."
While such comments draw no attention  from American Islamist organizations and their leaders, the groups do  find time to advocate for Hamas as a legitimate representative of the  Palestinians. In September, CAIR-Michigan Executive Director Dawud Walid  criticized the latest U.S.-effort to resume Israeli-Palestinian peace talks because Hamas was not invited.
"Now how in the world can there be a  realistic discussion about peace talks when the entity which represents  the elected government of the Palestinian people during a fair election  that was monitored by international inspectors, including former  president Jimmy Carter is not at the peace table?" Walid asked at a  rally. Later, he tried to deny his reference was to the terrorist group,  telling a reporter "I didn't even mention the word Hamas."
In 2005, CAIR-Canada called on officials to condemn remarks  made by an Israeli consul official who said most terrorists are Muslims  and that most Muslims support extremism. Earlier this year, CAIR sided with  University of California, Irvine students who plotted to disrupt a  speech by Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren, and then lied to school  officials about it.
Internal documents obtained by the Investigative Project on Terrorism  show the plan was to shut the speech down, not just make clear the  students had a different point of view. "[O]ur goal should be that he  knows that he cant (sic) just go to a campus and say whatever he wants,"  meeting minutes in which the disruption was discussed say. Members were  advised to "push the envelope," in order to "realize our role as the  MSU of UCIrvine."
The university's subsequent suspension of  the Muslim Student Union chapter was "politically motivated to silence  any future peaceful and legitimate criticism of Israel's brutal  practices," said CAIR-Los Angeles Executive Director Husam Ayloush.
In January, CAIR's Los Angeles chapter demanded  that a Lancaster, Calif., city council member be condemned for a  Facebook posting about Islam and honor killings it considered bigoted  and uninformed.
Court documents link CAIR and its founders  to a Hamas-support network in America, a connection the group  vehemently denies. But the FBI, which gathered the evidence, has said in writing  that it cannot consider CAIR a reliable liaison partner "until we can  resolve whether there continues to be a connection between CAIR or its  executives and HAMAS."
Here's a chance for action. Condemning  Zahar's remarks should be a no-brainer – a first step that moves toward  calls for Hamas to revoke its anti-Semitic charter calling for Israel's  destruction and agree to peace talks. If the self-anointed spokesmen for  America's Muslims can't do that, then they live with the record they've  established.
Failure to do so is hypocritical and yet  another example of why the FBI is right – for the media, for politicians  and anyone else – CAIR is not "an appropriate liaison partner."
Steven Emerson is Executive Director of the Investigative Project on TerrorismCopyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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