Friday, January 27, 2006

Remembering the Holocaust

Holocaust Memorial Day today.

The Muslim Council of Britain will once again boycott the Day.

MCB spokesman Inayat Bunglawala was asked on the BBC Radio 4 Sunday programme whether he was not sending a signal by refusing to attend. "We also send a signal by staying away from the Gay Pride march," he said. How could he compare the two, he was asked. "It is a religious principle," he replied.

Gays of course were also gassed, but that's hardly the point. The MCB's official line is:

The MCB has always denounced the monstrous cruelty and inhumanity that underpinned the Nazi Holocaust... After the world vowed "never again" at the end of the second world war, though, we have seen the same barbarism again, against peoples in Vietnam, Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia, Chechnya and recently in Darfur. So we said that our common humanity called upon us to also recognise the crimes perpetrated against other people, and we called for the establishment of an EU genocide memorial day. Such a day would help dispel the - frankly racist - notion that some people are to be regarded as being more equal than others...

The "R" word, used presumably to close any further discussion, though I'm not sure what the EU has to do with the many other crimes against humanity it lists...

While it is a fair to say we should remember other crimes - including the Turkish slaughter of the Armenians, arguably the first "modern" genocide - it seems to me unbelievably petty of the MCB to continue their boycott.

To put it bluntly, I cannot understand why they don't figure: why not let the Jews have their day? To attend would demonstrate our commitment to interfaith dialogue and integration in UK society.

Unhappily they are not prepared to make this leap, leading one to the rather less palatable conclusion that this seemingly media-savvy organisation really cannot bear to be associated with the Jews and actually is the anti-semitic islamist attack dog other blogs often portray.

Given the MCB's sensitivity to any perceived criticism of itself or the people it claims to represent, it might do well to stand with the Jews, Christians, democrats and others who seek to fight injustice and defend minorites, which of course Muslims remain in the UK. Sir Iqbal Death-Is-Too-Good-For-Him Sacranie, might even recall these well-known lines...

First they came for the Jews
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for the Communists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Communist.
Then they came for the trade unionists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a trade unionist.
Then they came for me
and there was no one left
to speak out for me.


Pastor Martin Niemoller

1 comment:

  1. They came for the palmists
    But I wasn’t a palmist
    So I did nothing

    They came for the bungee jumpers
    But I wasn’t a bungee jumper
    So I did nothing

    They came for the players’ agents
    But I wasn’t a players’ agent
    So I did nothing

    They came for the Charles Manson fans
    But I wasn’t a Charles Manson fan
    So I did nothing

    They came for the reflexoligists
    But I wasn’t a reflexoligist
    So I did nothing

    They came for the camp TV chefs
    But I wasn’t a camp TV chef
    So I did nothing

    They came for the Romos
    I laughed

    They came for the martial arts enthusiasts
    But I wasn’t a martial arts enthusiast
    So I did nothing

    They came for Eammon Holmes
    And I think I’m right in saying
    I applauded

    They came for the Danni Behr
    I said she’s over there
    Behind the wardrobe

    Turn a Blind Eye
    Sometimes it’s best to
    Turn a Blind Eye

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