FIANZ statement reveals double standards
FIANZ statement reveals double standards
President of the Federation of Islamic
Associations of New Zealand (FIANZ), Hazim Arafeh, issued a press
release in which he said the representative body of New
Zealand Muslims “strongly condemns the indiscriminate and
disproportionate Israeli aggressions…” and “is deeply
concerned at this deplorable act by Israel and calls upon
the New Zealand government and all world leaders to censure
Israel…”.
What is Israel’s “deplorable act”
that is worthy of such outrage and censure? According to
FIANZ, it is implementing “security measures which
includes [sic] metal detectors and turnstiles”, similar to
those all over Israel and around the world, at the Temple
Mount compound immediately after a terror attack and the
discovery of numerous weapons stored at the
site.
Terrorists smuggled weapons into the Temple Mount
compound and used the site as a base to carry out their
attack. The use of Islam’s third holiest site (and
Judaism’s most holy site) as a weapons cache and a terror
base, though, does not seem to upset FIANZ; only
attempts to prevent future attempts to use the site as
such.
FIANZ also found no room to condemn the murder of two Israeli Druze
policemen – who were protecting the Temple Mount
compound – that preceded the security measures. In fact,
they explicitly call for the removal of routine security measures that might
prevent further murderous attacks.
Neither has FIANZ been
outspoken against increased security measures at Islam’s
holiest site – the Ka’aba Mosque in Mecca – or steps taken at other mosques to protect
Muslims. FIANZ seems only “deeply concerned” when
the Israeli government installs such measures are taken to
protect its citizens and tourists. How can such selective
outrage encourage peace?
FIANZ has been vocal against
terror attacks in London, Egypt, Manchester, Jakarta, Canada, and inFrance and Lebanon, “stand[ing]
alongside all innocent victims of terrorism in peace,
solidarity and humanity” – the latter release was also
issued jointly with the New Zealand Human
Rights Commission.
FIANZ, however, was slow to censure a New Zealand Sheikh, Anwar
Sahib, for his antisemitic and misogynistic comments
last year and FIANZ have never once expressed any
condemnation of attacks against Israelis – not even the
most recent slaughter of a grandfather and his two
children at a shabbat dinner.
This lack of
condemnation or concern from FIANZ is, regrettably, consistent with the Islamic Council of New
Zealand, which said “…it is not all that clear that
Israelis are victims of terrorism in recent incidents…”
during the 2015 spate of attacks that included an
80 year old woman being stabbed in
Rishon Lezion and an old man run over and hacked at a bus
stop in Jerusalem.
It is troubling that the two largest
organisations representing Muslims in New Zealand cannot
bring themselves to condemn the murder of Israelis but FIANZ
is quick to condemn measures designed to prevent further
attacks that protect Muslims as much as anyone else.
Worldwide of course, given the carnage in Syria, Iraq, Yemen
and elsewhere, more Muslims fall prey to suicide bombing and
other forms of terrorism than anyone else.
There is no
sense, logic or humanity in the call to remove common
security measures, while whitewashing the murderous attack
that made them necessary. The Orwellian twisting of events on the Temple
Mount in the past couple of weeks highlights the
irrationality of ideologically driven hatred. These are not
the values of fair minded New
Zealanders.