Politics gets in the way

A book that purports to be about the Arab relationship with the Holocaust is instead a gratuitous exercise in Israel-bashing.

war of independence_521 (photo credit: Courtesy)
war of independence_521
(photo credit: Courtesy)
The Arabs and the Holocaust
By Gilbert Achcar | Metropolitan Books | 400 pages | $30
Gilbert Achcar, a professor of political science at London’s School of Oriental and African Studies who grew up in Beirut, has attempted to write a treatise on the way in which Nazism was received in the Arab world before 1948 and how the Holocaust and the Nakba have been intertwined ever since. It is a monumental and important task, one that he only partially accomplishes. Burdened by a deep bias and an apparent desire to write two books at once, one on the Arabs’ relationship with Nazism and another on the Arab-Israeli “narratives,” the overall work suffers irreparable harm, leaving it with scant scholarly value.
Politics dogs the eloquent writing from the start. The author argues that “as a result of the Zionist enterprise and Jewish immigration to Palestine, the Arabs were deeply affected by the Holocaust.” This seems to be an offhand way of saying that the Arabs paid the price of the Nazi genocide, because of Israel’s creation. It is not clear why the Nakba, what the Palestinians call the creation of Israel, gets intertwined with the Holocaust by the author, creating a grotesque pairing that is all too common.
Why does Achcar claim that “the use of the word holocaust to designate the Jewish genocide is eminently contestable and a subject of fierce controversy”? Why, in the introduction, is Israel given such importance: “The ‘state of the Jews’ plainly owes its creation to the Holocaust, for more than one reason.”
After all, this is supposed to be a book about Arab, not Jewish, politics.
All the semantics could have been passed over with the simple assertion, finally made, that “the reception [and understanding] of the Holocaust in the Arab East… [by the Arabs, has gotten] ever more complicated from the time of the Shoah itself to the time of the Nakba up to our own day.”
The first half of the book is devoted to the period before 1947 when the Arab reactions to Nazism cannot be confused with the Nakba.
The first Arab group examined is the “liberal Westernizers.” These were “those best qualified to criticize the premises of Zionism while defending the values of Western antifascist culture.” Although they didn’t appeal to the masses, “all things considered, the attitude of the Palestinian liberals was one of the most remarkable and commendable forms of opposition to Nazism in the world.” But Achcar fails to show that they did anything to oppose Nazism, except that in an op-ed in Filastin one argued that “Palestine needs neither fascism nor Nazism in order to arouse the feelings of her sons against Zionism.”
The author’s treatment of the Arab communist parties is lacking – they were more nuanced than he gives them credit for and his one extended quote has the Egyptian communist Anwar Kammil complaining that Zionism and Nazism were similar. What of Palestine’s Communist Party, which included Jews and Christian Arab communists – one of the latter, Tawfik Toubi, became the youngest member of the first Knesset?
The author’s examination of the Arab nationalists’ reaction to Nazism is dominated by an obscure academic debate, whether Stefan Wild in 1985 explained the history of the Arab support for Nazism correctly. To Achcar he did not – Michel Aflaq, founder of the Ba’ath Party, was not influenced by Nazism: “Nothing indicates that [he] had the least affinity for Nazism in his student days in France, unless one assumes that his purchase of a Nazi best-seller proves that he was fascinated by Nazi doctrine.”

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But if the Ba’athists were genuine nationalists, the Syrian Social Nationalist Party run by Antun Saadeh was “an earlier admirer of Hitler.” The author notes that the Lebanese Phalange, founded by the Maronite Pierre Gemayel in 1936, was influenced by his admiration of Hitler but was modeled on Franco’s fascism. Young Egypt, founded in 1933, also modeled itself on German and Italian fascism, and influenced Anwar Sadat who “never made any secret of his sympathy for the Germans in the war.”
The writer thinks the evidence unclear regarding a youth movement in Iraq called Futuwwa, which took part in a Hitler Youth parade in 1938. It was “one delegation among many.”
Achcar tends to turn those Arabs who were inclined toward Nazism into people with “ideological poverty and confusion” who “zigzagged.” Violent acts against Jews, like the Iraqi pogrom of 1941 are downplayed with claims that more Arabs died and quotes of others cited like “only some 160-180 Jews [were] killed.”
The section on Islamic fundamentalism and anti-Semitism examines such luminaries as Rashid Rida and Shakib Arslan (a Druse), who became pan-Islamists, and a discussion of the Saudi-German relationship and the Jerusalem mufti. Achcar informs us that the appointment of the mufti was a sort of Jewish plot, because Herbert Samuel, high commissioner of Palestine and a Jew, gave the Palestinians a “sower of discord, the first of an unbroken series of calamitous leaders.” This sentence and those like it, such as “the Arab population of Palestine would doubtless have detested Hitler had it known the real content of his doctrine,” degrade the work to the point where its academic pretensions suffer.
The author is full of rage and hatred for his scholarly adversaries, who are subjected to unrelenting abuse. He accuses one author, Matthias Kuntzel, of creating a book based on “a fantasy based-narrative pasted together from secondary sources and third-hand reports.” Two other authors, David Dalin and John Rothmann, are said to have an odd “mental universe” and to have compiled a book full of “clichés of anti-Palestinian and anti-Arab propaganda.” Is The Arabs and the Holocaust much more? A long rant in the conclusion culminates in asking: “How is it possible to deny the racist nature of Israeli society?” What does this have to do with Arabs and the Holocaust? The same can be asked of much of this tragic work.