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Debate over Arab museum
on the Holocaust intensifies
Brenda Gazzar
Khaled Kasab Mahameed stands in his Arab Holocaust museum in Nazareth.
NAZARETH, Israel (JTA) – Amin Abu Lashin was intrigued and bewildered when he heard from his teacher that an Arab would care enough about the Holocaust to establish a museum to educate other Arabs about the Jewish tragedy.

So the 12th-grader from the Franciscan Sisters School in this city
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and a classmate visited the site and met its founder, Khaled Kasab Mahameed, for themselves. Now the two Arab Israeli students, who say they have learned little about the Holocaust in school, plan to make a short film about the Arab Holocaust museum -- the first of its kind -- for their final class project.

"We sat with him and started to talk about why he's doing it," Abu Lashin, 18, said at the small museum where about 80 black-and-white posters of Holocaust photos from Yad Vashem are displayed with some Arabic explanations.

"In my opinion it's a great idea. I think that for the problems with the Arabs, the Palestinians -- in order to solve our problems -- we need to see the problems of the other, of the Jews."

Mahameed says that despite being met with skepticism or silence, The Arab Institute for Holocaust Research and Education -- created two years ago in the lobby of his law office -- is beginning to capture the attention of the Arab media and earning support from some in the community.

Mahameed, 45, believes his self-funded museum and Web site could contribute to peace in the region. But he still finds himself being criticized by Jewish organizations that claim he is manipulating the Holocaust for political aims and from Arabs who brand him a Zionist or a traitor to his people.

"I am alone, like Moses who stood on Mount Sinai," Mahameed, who has a photo of Yasser Arafat hanging in his back office, told JTA from his museum recently. "The poor souls of the 6 million Jews of the Holocaust are protecting me against the Palestinians and the ADL."

Mahameed came up with a great idea in educating the Arabic-speaking public about the Holocaust, said Arieh O'Sullivan, spokesman for the ADL Office in Israel, but has taken it in a direction with which the Anti-Defamation League cannot agree.

"He's saying 'the Holocaust existed, it's a terrible thing, but the Palestinians pay the price of the Holocaust, and Europeans felt guilty about the Holocaust, and they set up this colonial state here which is also totally ignorant of Zionist history,' " O'Sullivan said, referring to statements Mahameed has made in his Arabic book "The Palestinians and the Holocaust State" and in Arabic on his Web site.

"Israel arose not because of the Holocaust but despite the Holocaust," O'Sullivan said.

The museum also juxtaposes the Holocaust with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by placing pictures of Nazis threatening or killing Jews next to pictures of Palestinian refugees, Palestinian victims of violence and the Palestinian flag.

"He's equating the two, and you can't equate those things," O'Sullivan said. "The juxtaposition is just wrong."

Officials at the Yad Vashem memorial in Jerusalem, who met with Mahameed at the start of the project and even provided him with materials, say that such a juxtaposition "contributes to the misappropriation of the Holocaust as a tool against Israel" and say they cannot support his museum or his agenda.

Although Mahameed says Palestinians are paying the price for the murder of 6 million Jews, he insists that he is not equating the suffering of Holocaust victims with the plight of the Palestinians. Those who try to equate the two have an "undeveloped" understanding of the unique tragedy that is the Holocaust, he said.

"You see this?" a passionate Mahameed asked, pointing to a poster in his museum representing Palestinian refugees among a cluster of Holocaust posters. "I want to tell those people that 6 million were killed. I will tell these people that you have been expelled from your country. You weren't expelled just because you are Arabs but it is because of conflict.

"They were killed," he said, pointing to the poster of Jewish Holocaust victims, "just because they were Jews. How can I equate? I can't. It's to tell these people that we can't equate."

Yet at least some visitors to the museum come away with a different impression.

"In the Shoah they killed a lot of people, and now with Palestinians it's like the same," the student Abu Lashin said, explaining why he thinks Mahameed's museum has value. "The Arab people are being killed there in Palestine."

"It's not the same," he said, "but you can say that it's kind of" the same.

His 17-year-old classmate, Rana Odeh, agreed.

"The Jews are doing the same" to Palestinians "that was done to them," she said.

Mahameed told JTA that such perceptions are due to a dearth of instruction about the Shoah in Arab Israeli schools, for which he blames the Israeli Ministry of Education. But fellow attorney Solleman Qaddan of Nazareth developed similar ideas after visiting the museum and talking to Mahameed. Qaddan said he stopped talking to his friend for a whole year because of his opposition to the Arab Holocaust museum.

Today, however, Qaddan said he understands the connection and the need to compare the Holocaust with the suffering of the Palestinian people.

"We are not expecting the Israelis to wake up and give us full rights, but we are expecting from the international community to compare between the two things -- the way Khaled is comparing between the two issues, the two phenomena," he said. "He's right, 100 percent."

Mahameed believes that if Arabs only understood the Holocaust, they would choose nonviolence in their dealings with Israel. It is because Arabs have denied the Holocaust and its centrality in the minds of Israelis, Jews and the Western world that they deny their own power to affect Israeli policy and behavior, he said.

Mahameed's theory is that if Palestinians or Arabs would recognize the Holocaust as historical fact, they would bring the world to recognize their Palestinian tragedy, or "naqba."

Subsequently the world would recognize the Palestinians' political rights, probably including the right of return and compensation, according to Esther Webman, a researcher at Tel Aviv University's Stephen Roth Institute for the Study of Anti-Semitism and Racism and The Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies. Webman recently visited the museum.

Still, experts like Webman say, the conflict and its solution cannot be reduced just to the Holocaust.

Webman said it is a positive that Mahameed's museum -- the only such place in an Arab community -- is educating people on the Holocaust since many in Israel, particularly Arabs, and in the Arab world are ignorant or have misconceptions about the human tragedy.

"He has good intentions," she said of Mahameed.

However, Webman said, it is important to note that the museum "doesn't elevate itself from the political thing. He doesn't hide his end goal, which is recognition of the Palestinian naqba."

All Arab citizens of Israel are less than a day's auto trip from Yad Vashem and the Ghetto fighter's Museum. I flew 10000 miles to see them both. What's Mahammeed's hidden agenda? Never Again!!!

04/11/07 @20:10 | Anonymous
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Let's not be naive here. The fact that he juxtaposed the images of the Holocaust with images of Palestinian suffering is no accident. The Arab world has indeed sunk to new lows when the suffering of the Jews is used as a weapon against them. Shame on them - on the Arabs for this new depravity and on the Jews for letting it happen. The Holocaust Museum should never have signed off on the project or supplied the materials without having any say in the end result.

04/12/07 @18:31 | Anonymous
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THIS IS ABSOLUTELY SICK: LANTOS who just returned from meeting with the dictator of the TERRORIST STATE of SYRIA and LANTOS who just stated that he wants to go to IRAN to talk to their dictator and LANTOS who constantly uses his HOLOCAUST survivor as sympathy just accepts a petition from HILLEL for sanctions against IRAN!!!!!!

"Hillel presented Rep. Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) with 12,000 signatures on a petition urging Europe and the United Nations to support sanctions against Iran."

04/13/07 @12:48 | Anonymous
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If i believed in subhuman species, which i don't, i would say that he who labelled any group as a subhuman species actually belonged to a subhuman species himself.

04/13/07 @14:20 | Anonymous
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Evidently the last poster does not believe those who murder, maim for life, torture, behead, men, women, children and babies just because they are JEWS are subhuman! The worst enemy's of JEWS still are the self hating JEWS who defend JEW killers! And the main JEW killers are the "PALESTINIANS"!

04/13/07 @18:07 | Anonymous
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As Jews, it is difficult for us to understand anyone anywhere attempting to compare the unique horror of the shoah to any other tragedy of another people's history. However, to understand the Palestinian perspective on this, we have to see their nakba through their eyes, which, for them, is perceived as the greatest horror and a tragedy in their history. Even though there was no attempt at genocide, and even though there was no mass gathering of Palestinians, men, women and children, into camps where they were worked to death and then sent to gas chambers to die, this nakba is their national tragedy.

So when they compare the holocaust to their nakba, they are raising the level of perceived tragedy that they see in the shoah. It is an act of appreciation. In the strange logic of the Middle East, it must be seen as a positive step towards Palestinian understanding of the shoah. However, for them to believe that the State of Israel popped out of the head of the shoah like Athena out of the head of Zeus is again a misunderstanding of the history of Zionism and the relationship of the Jewish people to the Land of Israel. The Arab Museum of the Holocaust is a small step forward, but it is a step in the right direction.

04/14/07 @01:41 | Jerome J. Blaz *
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Khaled Kasab Mahameed did what is natural in the process of learning something new, in this case, the Holocaust. He compared it against his existing knowledge of the most painful event he was familiar with --the Nakba. Likewise, we as Jews, tend to compare the situation in Darfur, the tragedy in Rwanda and the "Killing Fields" of Cambodia to the Holocaust.

While the comparison of the Holocaust to the Nakba will no doubt be difficult for many Jews and appear to trivialize our experience, in the context, it is a gesture of goodwill, an attempt to find sympathy and common ground for the suffering of both peoples.

04/23/07 @12:12 | Anonymous
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