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Hitler and Nazi Resurgence
Hitler a Hero on
Palestinian Authority Radio
by Ezra HaLevi
A Palestinian Authority radio contest featured a laudatory biography of
Adolf Hitler replete with his military victories, heroism and no mention
of the Holocaust.
"His golden year was 1940, when his armies invaded Denmark, Norway,
Luxembourg, Holland, and Belgium and defeated France…By mid 1942, his
country controlled the largest land area in Europe…He refused to
surrender and continued to fight for two more years, but, his bitter end
came in the spring of 1945 when he took his own life…Who is he?" was the
question broadcast as a Voice of Palestine radio contest on November 27.
The question was part of the official Palestinian Authority-run radio’s
Ramadan quiz - rebroadcast this past week, and documented by Palestinian
Media Watch (PMW).
The broadcast presents Hitler heroically, detailing his two Medals of
Honor in World War I, his rise to power, his launching of World War II
and specifies country after country that he conquered.
“Not surprisingly, though citing his victories and 'bitter' fall in
great detail, the Holocaust is not mentioned,” the latest PMW report
states. “This is consistent with Palestinian education in general which
erases the Holocaust from history." A recent PMW report on the new 12th
grade PA history schoolbook showed that many pages were dedicated to the
history of World War II and even to Nazi racism, but neither Jews nor
the Holocaust were mentioned.
According to the PMW report, “[I]t is important to understand that the
revulsion of Hitler expected in the West is not true in Palestinian
society. Palestinians can be found who are named "Hitler" as a first
name: Hitler Salah [Al Hayat Al Jadida (Fatah), Sept. 28, 2005], Hitler
Abu-Alrab [Al Hayat Al Jadida (Fatah), Jan. 27, 2005], Hitler Mahmud
Abu-Libda [Al Hayat Al Jadida (Fatah), Dec.18, 2000.] Articles have
appeared in both Fatah and Hamas newspapers which demonstrate Hitler's
admired status.”
The Voice of Palestine contest offered a prize of 600 shekels to the
person who guessed Hitler's name.
Long History of PA Adulation of Hitler
Admiration of Hitler in PA newspapers is nothing new. A PA newspaper
which proudly listed the ways in which different foreign leaders singled
out the Arabs of Israel as examples of ideal revolutionaries proudly
began the article with a quote from Adolf Hitler:
"Adolf Hitler, while exciting the Germans of the Sudetenland - the
Sudetenland is a German province that the Allies had annexed to
Czechoslovakia after the First World War - told them in his broadcasts:
Look at what the Palestinian revolutionaries are doing to Great
Britain!!"
[Al-Rissala (Hamas Weekly), May 18, 2006]
The phenomenon of PA Arabs being named after Hitler was explained in an
article in the official PA daily Al-Hayat Al-Jadida (Fatah) on April 13,
2000:
"Even Adolf Hitler, who after the fall of Nazi Germany turned into a
political horror for most of the writers and artists, during the last
decades has started to return himself to his part of the picture. There
are some in Britain who defended Hitler and tried to do justice for him.
There are elderly people, among them Arabs, who still carry the name
Hitler since their fathers, who were charmed by him, linked them [their
children] with his name."
The admiration for Hitler is consistent with the status of Mein Kampf,
which a PA daily cited as a best-seller in PA-controlled areas [Al Hayat
Al Jadida (Fatah), Sept. 2, 1999].
Historic Nazi Ties
The Hitler - Arab alliance during World War II is a factor in the
continued admiration for Hitler apparent in PA society. Mufti Haj Amin
al-Husseini, the Arab leader in pre-state Israel under the British
Mandate, was a staunch ally of Hitler. The meetings between the Mufti
and Hitler are well documented.
“Those Were the Days”
The PMW report closes with the translation of an interview from a PA
daily of Sheikh Ali Hussein Abu-Ibrahim, a Palestinian resident of
Lebanon who claims he is 116 years old and describing his professed
friendship with Hitler, as well as his pride in fighting for the Nazi
leader. “Whereas this is a personal account whose historical accuracy is
not important, what is significant is the positive, even proud attitude
about his friendship with Hitler, that is being expressed so routinely,”
the report states:
"Question: What are the important events in your life that left the
biggest impression?”
“Answer: The first was the Hitler event. I met him in Jerusalem in one
of the Turkish Army camps, and the friendship between us was very tight.
At the time, I was a sergeant while Hitler was a simple private. The
relationship between us tightened even more once Turkey entered the war
together with Germany. The second event was when I participated [with
the Nazi army] in entering France and conquering it. I was in charge of
the cannon that shelled Paris, which had an active influence on the fall
of the French capital and its conquest without any notable resistance.
Hitler congratulated me on this shelling and its consequences… As an
artillery officer, I took part in many operations against the English
and France, until the end of the Second World-War …" [Al-Hayat Al-Jadida
(Fatah), May 12, 2003.]
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