
View my articles
Mail me my articles
Talk Gaza : Flotilla facts
Melanie Phillips
Shariah Finance Watch
Australian Islamist Monitor - MultiFaith
Haifa diarist blog
Hitchens on Euston
Why Israel is at war
Lozowick Blog
NeoZionoid The NeoZionoiZeoN blog
Blank pages of the age
Silent Runnings
Jewish Issues watchdog
Discover more about Israel advocacy
Zionists the creation of Israel
Dissecting the Left
Paula says
Belmont Club
Perspectives on Israel - Zionists
Zionism & Israel Information Center
Zionism educational seminars
Christian dhimmitude
Forum on Mideast
Israel Blog - documents terror war against Israelis
Zionism on the web
RECOMMENDED: newsback News discussion community
RSS Feed software from CarP
Sderot media center
International law, Arab-Israeli conflict
Think-Israel
Abba Eban interview
The Big Lies
Shmloozing with terrorists
IDF ON YOUTUBE
Israel's contributions to the world
MEMRI
Mark Durie Blog
Air France promo of Israel, 1951
| Gaza Blockade | Diplomacy | Iran | History unfolding | Historic statements |
| Dhimmitude | Media imbalance | UN doings | Philosophy & Morality | US Politics |
| Terrorism | Australian Issues | Neo Anti Sem | Spengler | Videos |
The beneficent legacy of Persia remembered
These days, with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's intentionally incendiary words about the Holocaust and Israel, as well as the mischievous shenanigans of his cabal -- from organizing a "scholarly" conference on the Holocaust to a cartoon competition on that same theme -- the question of Iran's relationship to Israel, to Jews, and to the Holocaust has, understandably, become an international concern.
Surely Ahmadinejad's dangerous words and deeds deserve to be thoroughly condemned. The regime in Iran, and leaders like Ahmadinejad, must be made to understand that the world community has zero tolerance for such anti-Semitic ranting. But it would also be tragic to hold Iran, as a nation, and Iranians around the world responsible for these rants or assume they reflect the reality and soul of Iranian history and attitude.
Iran's history, like the history of many other nations, is not free of the blemish of anti-Semitism. But for every anti-Semitic blight, there are many more bright spots where Iranians have shown the wisdom to swim against the dark tide of rancor.
The Old Testament begins with a celebration of these bright spots, and the unequivocal condemnation of the dark side. The Bible is replete with profuse praise for Persia (the much-maligned Iran of today) and its rulers. In the book of Ezra, the Lord speaks through the proclamations of Cyrus, the king of Persia, who declares, "The Lord God of Heaven hath given me all the kingdoms of the Earth, and he has charged me to build him a house in Jerusalem." Cyrus acceded to this divine command, and thus was the second Temple in Jerusalem built. In other parts of the Old Testament, there is hearty praise of Cyrus as God's "Anointed" and the "Chosen" ruler, who freed Jews from their Babylonian captivity.
Scholars of history and exegetes of the Bible concur that ancient Persia was exemplary for its willingness to help the Jews fight the age-old curse of anti-Semitism. The Jewish feast of Purim celebrates the fact that Esther, queen to a Persian king, saved the Jews of the kingdom from annihilation. But along with the benevolence of Cyrus there lurked on the Iranian horizon the race of Haman, whose mind and heart was darkened by rancor and hate.
Today, Ahmadinejad has altogether forfeited the magnanimity of Cyrus, and opted instead to embrace the poisoned malice of Haman. The duality of the approach to Jews evident in the dawn of Iranian civilization can easily be seen in the troubled history of 20th century as well.
As early signs of the murderous Final Solution became visible in Europe, the Iranian government of the time convinced the Nazi race experts in Germany that Iranian Jews had lived in Iran for over 2,500 years, and were thus fully assimilated citizens of the Iran and must be afforded all the rights of such citizens. The Nazis accepted this argument and the lives of all Iranian Jews living under the Nazi yoke were saved. An account of this episode can be found in the "History of Contemporary Iranian Jews," published by Center for Iranian Jewish Oral History.
Moreover, as I have recounted in my book "Persian Sphinx," Iranian diplomats in Europe and elsewhere offered hundreds of Iranian passports to European Jews, thus saving their lives. And when the Nazi killing machines began their slaughter of innocent Polish Jews, 1,388 Jews, including 871 children were moved to Tehran where they lived in relative safety till they moved to Israel. Again the "History of Contemporary Iranian Jews" has provided an account of what are called "Tehran Children."
Iran's attitude toward Iranian and Arab Jews leaving their countries for Israel was no less commendable. The man responsible for the transfer of Jewish refugees in Iran, Moir Ezry -- who became Israel's ambassador to Iran -- writes in Yadnameh, "As the Shah of Iran [who ruled from 1941-1979] had particular affinity for the Jews, the military and bureaucratic institutions of the country spared no effort in helping refugees reach Israel."
He goes on to say, "Countries like Bulgaria, and Rumania asked for great sums of money from Israel in order to set their Jewish population free. But the Iranian government never asked for any money."
The facts of history during the second half of that murderous century are also a credit to Iran and its people. Iran was the first Muslim country in the world to establish diplomatic and economic ties with Israel. Throughout the '50s, '60s and '70s, Iran supplied oil to Israel, and after the rise of Nasser's Pan-Arab nationalism in the Middle East, Israel, along with Iran's secret police, operated a radio station in the Southern provinces of Iran and beamed their anti-Nasser message to the entire Arab world. David Menashri, one of the most eminent Israeli scholars of modern Iran, calls the '60s and '70s "the Golden Age of Iranian Jewry when Jews enjoyed almost total cultural and religious autonomy, experienced economic progress and had no less political freedom than their Muslim counterparts."
He adds, "On per capita terms, they may well have been the richest community in the world.'' To overlook this history and instead only focus our gaze on the deplorable words of irresponsible leaders like Ahmadinejad is to forget the Esthers of Iran and focus our angry gaze only the rancorous Hamans.
Abbas Milani is the director of the Iranian Studies Program at Stanford University and the co-director of the Iran Democracy Project at Hoover Institution. Contact us at insight@sfchronicle.com.
Original piece is http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2006/02/19/INGMQH9TVM1.DTL
Oscar-winning director Oliver Stone in an interview decried what he called the Jewish lobby's control over Washington's foreign policy and said that Hitler's actions should be put "into context."
A day after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he would not extend a West Bank building freeze, violence broke out in an outpost there following the demolition of an illegally built home.
A former American spy chief says the path to U.S. military action against Iran is inescapable.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu slammed the team named by the United Nations Human Rights Council to investigate the Turkish flotilla incident.
New Zealand's Jewish community is mounting a legal case against the country's new law banning kosher slaughter.
The Obama administration will allow the PLO office in Washington to fly the Palestinian flag and assume the title of "delegation."
The elected leader of Australian Jewry blasted his Christian counterpart over an "ill-considered" resolution asking churches to boycott goods produced by West Bank Jews.
Yemen's Supreme Court has upheld the death sentence of a Yemeni man who killed a Jewish fellow citizen after demanding that he convert.
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak is returning to Washington to coordinate ways to isolate Iran.
Vandals painted red swastikas on the walls of the Jewish Museum of Greece in Athens.
Haredi Orthodox youth are being blamed for a massive fire near Jerusalem that nearly led to the evacuation of Hadassah Hospital.
U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) called on her opponent in their congressional election to stop writing for Andrew Breitbart's conservative website.
The president of Egypt's Jewish community allegedly has fled the country after being convicted of fraud and ordered to prison.
Israel lost to Turkey in the Euroleague women's volleyball bronze medal game in an empty arena amid tight security.
A Chabad rabbi has become the first rabbi since World War II to join the Canadian armed forces full time.
Israeli airstrikes reportedly destroyed a weapons manufacturing site and two smuggling tunnels in the Gaza Strip.
A firecracker exploded on the steps of the synagogue in Malmo, Sweden, a day after a bomb threat was taped to the building.
Israel's Cabinet agreed to send a group of police officers to Haiti to maintain public order.
A Netanya man was arrested for murdering his three young children.
Ahead of midterm elections, a Democratic leader distributed talking points to fellow House Democrats stressing support for Israel by President Obama and the party.
Two Jewish schools were ranked among the best high schools in Brazil.
The Palestinian Authority has granted travel documents and honorary citizenship to Irish anti-Israel activists who participated in a Gaza aid flotilla.
Email this web page to a friend