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Jews, Muslims Make Pilgrimage To Auschwitz

Auschwitz

First Posted: 08/17/2010 7:56 pm Updated: 05/25/2011 6:25 pm

By Jeff Diamant
Religion News Service

CARLSTADT, N.J. (RNS) The scenario might have seemed unlikely: prominent Muslims and Jews from the United States, trekking across the Atlantic in mournful, spiritual solidarity to visit two Nazi concentration camps. Together.

The trip to Dachau and Auschwitz was meant to combat the rise in Holocaust denial that has popped up in various Muslim and non-Muslim circles around the world--and online--in recent years.

"The best way to convince someone about the truth of something is to let them see it for themselves and experience it for themselves," said Rabbi Jack Bemporad of the Center for Interreligious Understanding in Carlstadt, who organized the trip.

"I feel that it was important to take Muslim leaders who have a really significant following in the American-Muslim community."

Some of the eight imams on the weeklong trip, which ended Aug. 12, had previously worked with Jewish groups in interreligious dialogue. Only one of the eight, Shaikh Yasir Qadhi of New Haven, Conn., academic dean for the AlMaghrib Institute, had been quoted doubting the extent of the Holocaust in 2001, but he recanted long before the trip, saying his past views were based on misinformation.

On their return, the eight imams released a statement citing the 6 million Jewish deaths in the Holocaust, among 12 million Holocaust deaths overall. It added, "We condemn any attempts to deny this historical reality and declare such denials or any justification of this tragedy as against the Islamic code of ethics."

In interviews, the imams said the trip affected them deeply.

"The experience was overwhelming," Qadhi said. "It was a very moving experience for all of us imams, in particular myself. I had never seen anything like this. I was just overwhelmed throughout the entire trip. I was just overwhelmed at the sheer inhumanity of it. I could not comprehend how such evil could be unleashed."

Like other imams, he said the historical truth of the Holocaust should not be distorted by the last 60 years of tensions in the Middle East.

"Politics should not play a role in historical facts," Qadhi said. "Whatever happened post-Holocaust should not diminish the evil that was the Holocaust. ... The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is very complicated. Let's leave anti-Semitism out of it."

Some said the trip's most emotional part was seeing gathered collections of victims' hair, suitcases, and belongings.

"Almost everybody was in tears," said Imam Muzammil Siddiqi, of the Islamic Society of Orange County, Calif.

"I laid a wreath of flowers there at the wall and recited the words from the Quran which says killing one person is like killing all of humanity and saving one life is like saving all of humanity. I said, 'Here it feels part of us were killed. It's part of our human brothers and sisters.'"

The imams said they also were moved by meetings with Holocaust survivors, and from seeing their tattooed numbers.

Also during the trip, which was sponsored by the Konrad Adenauer Foundation and the Center for Interreligious Understanding, the imams met with the Roman Catholic cardinal of Krakow and the chief rabbi of Poland, who hosted them for dinner on the first night of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.

Some participants, including Hannah Rosenthal, the U.S. State Department's special envoy to monitor and combat anti-Semitism, said they felt the trip itself was of historical importance.

"I know of no other time that a group of imams experienced the camps, and prayed at the camps, and came out with a strong statement that condemns Holocaust denial, Holocaust justification, Holocaust comparison and anti-Semitism," Rosenthal said. "I know of no other time that's happened in history."

The sight of Muslims praying at Dachau stopped other passers-by in their tracks, she said.

History aside, the trip--like all pilgrimages to concentration camps--was emotionally devastating, said Bemporad, the rabbi.

"It was painful," he said. "One of the most painful things was to see these imams, all pretty intelligent and sophisticated, absolutely bawling like children. They couldn't get over it, especially when they saw these children's clothes and children's shoes by the tonful. It was really poignant."

(Jeff Diamant writes for The Star-Ledger in Newark, N.J.)

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By Jeff Diamant Religion News Service CARLSTADT, N.J. (RNS) The scenario might have seemed unlikely: prominent Muslims and Jews from the United States, trekking across the Atlantic in mournful, spiri...
By Jeff Diamant Religion News Service CARLSTADT, N.J. (RNS) The scenario might have seemed unlikely: prominent Muslims and Jews from the United States, trekking across the Atlantic in mournful, spiri...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Edward Standley
opinionated jerk
10:41 AM on 08/25/2010
A small, but significant moment of hope for humanity.
Carroll27
Nature's own nice conservative
06:10 PM on 08/24/2010
My only complaint is the ending of the first paragraph: "Together." Enough of these one-word sentences already. Unless it's "Yes" or "No," stop trying to dramatize a piece by chopping up the grammar. Use better language to make your dramatic point.
05:09 PM on 08/24/2010
What unbelievable nonsense. Imans cried over hair and childrens clothing? Were there not uniforms to be worn at the camps? Was not typhus rampant in the camps, and all over Europe for that matter, so all inmates heads had to be shaved? Enough with this Holocaust mantle worn to the end of time. Is this staged display of propaganda going to work on the Arabs? Does this give Israel further license to continue their slaughter of innocents, because that is exactly what this was about.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MichelNYC
In ATX now: gay, liberal, grad student. 2014/16!
03:51 PM on 08/23/2010
Awesome story. Thanks for sharing!
05:35 PM on 08/19/2010
This is a good start. Somehow we have to educate the christians & jews toward tolerance & acceptance as well, maybe by taking them on a visit to the "refugee camps" in Southern Lebanon?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DannyEV
06:49 AM on 08/19/2010
wonderful event, wonderful story. thanks for posting it.
01:57 AM on 08/19/2010
Once upon a time we would sing, "All we are saying is give peace a chance." And we meant it, because we wanted to end a brutal war which killed hundreds of thousands--innocents, of course. We sang it loud, over and over again. From our hearts. But when the war finally ended, the volume died down and the song ended.

So now we are threatened by the possibility of another, hideous conflagration as the latest iteration of the Middle East Blame Game ratchets up amongst proud, intelligent and cultured peoples--and especially their leaders--who have existentially shared this region for millennia, but who deny that it should be shared equitably, and, yes, amicably.

But it is up to us--perhaps as a form of preventative political medicine--to let all leaders know, that we want to live our lives in peace and community, with amicability and respect for all of our diverse neighbors. Without gun ships, suicide bombings, rockets, assassinations and anything else that violates "Thou shalt not kill." It's time to chant loudly , "We want peace in all the Middle East" It's time to crank up the volume once again and sing, "All we are saying is give peace a chance."

Without fail--before it's too late.
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GoodwithWood
Dis eas all yoooour fault
01:15 AM on 08/19/2010
Aaaaaaaa WOW!
12:45 AM on 08/19/2010
YES! Why isn't this story front-page news?

http://blackgayandjewish.wordpress.com/
11:06 PM on 08/23/2010
Because HP thinks that more people would rather read about Tiger Woods' divorce being made final or about the sale of some rich man's Hollywood mansion.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pupadup4oBama
08:53 PM on 08/18/2010
Yay!!! Out of such deep sorrow and ugliness can come beauty and understanding.
Kudos to these two groups of people to open their minds and hearts.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
judiNJ
The Free Market is Not Free
06:22 PM on 08/18/2010
This is sooo schizoid: In the New York Times, a big picture of the Newster braying about the "Mosque on Ground Zero" and this wonderful story. I think my head will explode.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pupadup4oBama
10:53 PM on 08/18/2010
That's why an article like this is needed. To combat the ridiculousness of the other.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
imworking4me2
01:52 AM on 08/19/2010
That is so true! So true!
03:41 PM on 08/18/2010
Excellent story, thank you. The world needs more of this.
12:46 PM on 08/18/2010
Why is this an unlikely event?, Muslims protected Jews in many cases throughout Europe and North Africa during the war. Except for the willfully ridiculous like Iran's president Ahmadinijad we all know the horrors that were inflicted upon the European Jewish community.
Now it would be really nice if Jews take a trip to Palestine to visit the settlements and acknowledge the NABKA.
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03:16 PM on 08/18/2010
There are a surprising number of holocaust deniers, especially in the Muslim world. One of the largest selling books in much of the muslim world is the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.

This is definitely a good step forward in correcting this.
05:08 PM on 08/18/2010
There are many Christian Holocaust deniers who need to make this trip.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jcabowers
People are more important than money
09:25 PM on 08/18/2010
If given sufficient time and success, the Nazis would have gone after Muslims as well. There is common ground for them in that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DannyEV
06:48 AM on 08/19/2010
No one has used the word "unlikely" except you. Do you take cold water with you everywhere you go, ready to throw? Your posting is at best ungenerous. I bet people you know hate to see you coming.
DrSnuggles
You label me and I'll label you
09:45 AM on 08/18/2010
This story exemplifies the feeling of unity that good people feel when confronted with evil; I hope our politicians, lobbyists and pundits take note of this and stop bandying about words like "Hitler" or "Nazi" without understanding what that connotation really means.

The second you denigrate the memory of this horrible time by comparing Obama or Bush to Hitler is the second I stop listening to you.
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sixchair
Always left, usually right
09:41 AM on 08/18/2010
Everyone gets lost in their politics, and it's important to know how badly being so lost can turn out.

Muslims are required to Haj if they are able once in their life. I think everyone of every faith should be similarly called upon to visit Auschwitz. It provides anu undeniable perspective that tempers everything you say, think and do regarding your fellow man.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DannyEV
06:48 AM on 08/19/2010
great idea.