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Thursday, September 25, 2014

GERMAN TAXPAYERS FUNDING WAR AGAINST THE JEWS, now under the guise of pro-Palestinian activism - The historic alliance of Muslims and Germans for the destruction of the Jews dates back to the Third Reich

EUROPE outsourcing the killing of Jews to the Arabs.
 
Important and relevant points regarding German-Palestinian old ties - whether the Germans were Nazis, Communists, or capitalists.  How anti-Semitism brought them together.

Palestinian Leader al-Husseini in Nazi Germany
Post-war Germany has a long history of financing, arming, and abetting Arab terror groups that kill Jews. 

Communist East Germany did just that, with its open support for Palestinian terrorists. 

And West Germany - in spite of its professed capitalism and democracy - also did its part to help and finance Arabs who terrorized and killed Jews. 

After the German unification those anti-Israel efforts merged as well, and now we have Germany directly funding the Palestinians, and indirectly funding German groups of activists engaged in active vilification of Israel and the Jews.  

That old tradition.  As a matter of fact, the German Nazis and the Palestinian leader at that time worked hand in hand in the design and implementation of the Final Solution. 

This is a page of history that the media, educational institutions, peace activists, and even historians would rather ignore.  But there are a number of books that have addressed this important chapter in Arab and German history.

Haj Amin al-Husseini - Mufti of Jerusalem and Palestinian leader during the 1940s - was very much a part of the Nazi killing machine that destroyed 6 million Jewish lives.  He lived in Berlin during World War II, and was an enthusiastic partner in the design and implementation of the Holocaust, working alongside Hitler and his top cohorts. 
 
The Mufti with Muslim Nazi SS Division
He even created his own Muslim Nazi SS Division, guilty of gruesome crimes in eastern Europe.  He escaped to the Middle East to avoid a trial for war crimes. 
 
His post-war disciples, Yassir Arafat and Mahmoud Abbas became Palestinian leaders, infused with genocidal ideology.

Hitler and Nazi ideas are well and alive in the Palestinian territories, with the display of Nazi flags, eulogies to Hitler, and the official Nazi salute during military and political rallies.

Read references at the end of this page.  These are things that do not make it to the mainstream media.  

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List of articles on this page,
 followed by references:
  • German taxpayers funding anti-Israel hate
  • Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks at rally against anti-Semitism
  • Germany sees rising anti-Semitism among Muslims
  • NGO Monitor report: German funding for anti-Israel activism
  • Old habits die hard - Germany has been funding Arab terrorism since the Nazi years
  • Palestinian Arabs:  Nazis then, Nazis now - The facts
  • The Communists too joined the war against Israel, by funding, training and arming Arab terrorists

Merkel_rally

German taxpayers funding anti-Israel hate

By Vijeta Uniyal

Despite Chancellor Merkel’s recent high-profile call to fight rising anti-Semitism, the German tax payer remains one of the leading sponsors of hate groups targeting Israel and the Jewish people. It's got to stop
 
A week after Chancellor Angela Merkel reaffirmed her government’s commitment to fight anti-Semitism at a landmark rally in Berlin, a lot needs to be done on the ground to stop the rising tide of anti-Semitism.
 
German authorities go beyond apathy to outright facilitating anti-Jewish hate activities
 
At home, German Law enforcement authorities have not only shown apathy and inaction, as in the case of the Muslim Imam in Berlin who called for the extermination of Jews, or against demonstrators in many German cities blaring anti-Semitic slogans. Police have sometimes seemed to go out of their way, allowing demonstrators to use police-megaphones and vehicles to spread the hate – as in Frankfurt and Hagen recently.
 
Germany is the leading financial sponsor of genocidal anti-Jewish organizations - many hiding behind pro-Arab humanitarian disguises.
 
Internationally, the German tax payer remains a leading sponsor of NGOs and groups that target Israel and the Jewish people.
Continued

 
According to conservative estimates provided by the watchdog group NGO Monitor, between 2010 and 2014 the German government gave more than €4 million to organizations in Israel and the Palestinian territories that are actively running campaigns to demonize and delegitimize the State of Israel.
 
Two German political foundations alone, the Rosa Luxembourg Foundation and the Heinrich Boell Foundation, could be funneling more than €2 million worth of taxpayer’s revenue every year to such groups.
 
According to NGO Monitor, both of these political foundations have shown a lack of transparency in their allocation practices, making it difficult to estimate the actual amount of money going to these groups. The real figures could be even higher.
 
Not surprisingly, both these foundations also happen to have a long history of supporting anti-Israel campaigns in Germany. 
 
Kerstin Müller, the Green Party politician who was active in the anti-Israel Boycott-Movement and campaigned for the labelling of Israeli goods coming into the European Union, now heads the Heinrich Boell Foundation office in Tel Aviv.
 
The Rosa Luxembourg Foundation is affiliated to the far-Left party “Die Linke”, successor of the East German Communist Party (SED). The Luxembourg Foundation regularly organizes events for anti-Israel activists and publishes literature promoting Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) tactics directed against Israel.
 
The overall figures from Europe and other Western countries are just as staggering.
 
Between 2011 and 2014 European governments gave over €25 million to Israeli and Palestinian NGOs that are involved in de-legitimization and anti-Israel Boycott campaigns.
 
Globally, around €100 million are granted annually to NGOs operating from Europe, North America and elsewhere that run anti-Israel campaigns.
 
Many NGOs receiving funding from Germany are involved in Lawfare campaigns against Israel. Using this so-called Lawfare strategy, these activist groups seek to exploit legal provisions abroad to intimidate the Israeli government and officials with civil lawsuits and investigations.
 
The main purpose of the exercise is to harass, bully and use courts as platforms for activism, rather than achieving any legal outcome.
 
The old Nazi hatred shows behind the pro-Arab banners
 
However, it is even more troubling when German funding goes to groups that are blatantly anti-Semitic. German funds allocated in the name of “development projects” end up with groups that regularly use anti-Semitic themes and imagery in their campaigns. 
 
This stream of funding coming from German and other European countries is part of a sustained campaign to put pressure on Israel, forcing it into making one-sided concessions.
 
It is a diplomacy driven by a childish belief that all the conflicts in the Middle East would cease to exist, if only Israel could willingly shrink itself to whatever size Arab nations are willing to allow her -- at a given point in time.
 
They help fuel Arab hatred instead of peace, and they absolve Arabs from responsibility
 
However, the geopolitical “arm-twisting” and demonization of Israel comes at a price.
 
Instead of lifting the level of education or developing the skills of the Palestinian youth, these groups continue to fuel the age old hostilities. And instead of helping impressionable Palestinian youth to think critically about the deficiencies in their own society and strive for real change, these groups present them with easy scapegoats in the form of Israel and the Jewish people.
 
This hatred of Israel has harmed Palestinian and Arab societies more than it has hurt the Israelis.
 
It's time to demand accountability - don't just talk against anti-Semitism.  STOP FUNDING IT. 
 
Today, when German politicians are grappling with the issue of rising anti-Semitism, it would be a good time for them to demand accountability from donor organizations and to take a closer look at the networks in Germany that fund this hate.
 
Recent anti-sematic riots in Germany are clearly a precursor of things to come. If migration from the Arab counties continues at the current pace, a good measure of this hate could be imported back to Germany, and that too is an issue we cannot ignore.
 
Author - Vijeta Uniyal is an Indian-born analyst living in Germany
Read more on The Commentator: Merkel, israel, and Demonising Israel

Via - http://www.frontpagemag.com/2014/vijeta-uniyal/how-germany-funds-jew-hate/

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RELATED

 
Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks at rally against anti-Semitism.
 
Merkel said it pains her to hear of young Jewish parents asking whether they can raise their children in Germany or older people asking whether it was right to stay.
 
“We are making unmistakably clear with this rally that Jewish life belongs to us — it is part of our identity and culture,” she said.
 
“We want Jews to feel safe in Germany,” Merkel said. “They should feel that this country is our common home, in which they like all people who live here have a good future.”
 
 
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The disproportionate aid PER CAPITA to Palestinians
 
 
 
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Germany Sees Rising Anti-Semitism Among Muslims
 
By Bertrand Benoit - Wall Street Journal
 
Most Jewish institutions in Germany (such as kindergartens) have long had 24-hour police protection.  But such vigilance, usually intended to stave off neo-Nazis, has taken on fresh urgency amid an upsurge in anti-Semitic acts this year that some authorities and Jewish community leaders blame on Muslims.
 
This summer, protesters against Israel's offensive in the Gaza Strip unleashed a barrage of abuse, calling Jews "cowardly pigs," "child murderers" and fodder for the gas chambers, according to witnesses and Jewish organizations. On the sidelines, a mob hounded a Jewish couple in Berlin and Jews were beaten in Hamburg and Frankfurt.
 
Similar incidents were taking place elsewhere in Europe, but in the country that masterminded the Holocaust, they evoked particularly painful memories.
 
"We haven't heard these things on German streets for 50, 60 years," said Dieter Graumann, president of the Central Council of Jews, sitting in his office on a Frankfurt side street. "The fact that people on German streets are saying Jews should burn, Jews should be slaughtered, Jews should be gassed. It hits a particular nerve for us."
 
Through education and prevention, but also repression, successive German governments largely succeeded in banning anti-Semitic speech from the public domain. Yet these efforts focused on the far-right; anti-Semitism in Muslim communities was left unchecked, according to community activists and government officials.
 
"The protests got a lot of attention, but 'Jew' has been used as an insult by young Muslims in schoolyards, on sports grounds, for years," said Ahmad Mansour, an Israeli Arab who has led initiatives against prejudice and radicalization among Muslims in Germany since 2007. "There is a group of people that Germany's fight against anti-Semitism passed by."
 
Aiman Mazyek, president of the Central Council of Muslims in Germany, said that Islam forbids anti-Semitism, but that some Muslims blur the border between criticism of Israel and hate speech.
 
"It must be addressed, but community leaders can't do this on their own," he said. "The state must step in, too, as it has done against right-wing anti-Semitism."
 
In a radio interview two weeks ago, Hans-Georg Maassen, president of Germany's domestic intelligence agency, said "we've always associated anti-Semitism with national socialism [Nazis], the extreme right. We are now realizing that many immigrants who came to Germany harbor anti-Semitic prejudice."
 
Windows at a newspaper office in Spremberg, Germany, were sprayed with anti-Semitic grafitti this month, reading 'Jews' and 'We'll catch you all.'
Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Long-term studies by Bielefeld and Leipzig universities show anti-Semitic prejudice in Germany is less widespread today than it was 10 years ago. Police records of anti-Semitic acts show the same trend.
 
But starting in 2002, the year of the second intifada,, bouts of violence in the Middle East have coincided with spikes of anti-Semitism here, according to police, fanning fear among Jews.
 
"If you look back over 30 years, the statistics haven't changed that much," said Daniel Alter, a Berlin rabbi who survived a vicious attack in 2012 and now works with imams on outreach programs. "But anti-Semitism has become more visible, more accepted."
 
Mr. Alter now wears a cap over his yarmulke. "There are too many places in Berlin where it would be irresponsible to advertise yourself as a Jew," he said.
 
Esther Mizrahi, director of the Lauder Nitzan Kindergarten in central Berlin, said she doesn't feel comfortable taking her children to the kosher store. A 31-year-old woman from an Orthodox household said Lebanese boys threw a stone through her window last month after arguing with her children over the Gaza conflict.
 
One obstacle to combating anti-Semitism among Muslims has been reluctance among politicians and the police to stigmatize a community that faces racism itself. Last week, a study by the government's antidiscrimination watchdog showed far more antipathy in Germany against Gypsies and Muslims than against Jews. A mosque was burned in Berlin last month in a suspected arson attack.
 
Immigration from the former Soviet Union after the Berlin Wall fell saw Germany's Jewish community grow to about 130,000 from 30,000 in the late 1980s. That doesn't count an estimated 10,000 to 15,000 Israelis living here.
 
The spread of anti-Semitic speech, from online forums to schoolyards, risks sending the community retreating in its shell, said Deidre Berger, director of the American Jewish Committee Berlin Office.
 
"Frictions with Muslims mean more and more Jewish families are deciding to send their children to Jewish schools," she said. "There's a tendency to seclude. If you can't send your child to the local school, it's a daunting challenge for society."
 
A year ago, Ms. Merkel said she was ashamed that Jewish institutions still required police protection. Mr. Graumann thinks it will be a long time before the guards become superfluous.
"I wish we no longer needed them," he said. "But that may have to wait until the Messiah comes."
 
Write to author Bertrand Benoit at bertrand.benoit@wsj.com
 
 
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NGO MONITOR REPORT:
 
German funding for political advocacy NGOs
 active in the Arab-Israeli conflict
 
German government funding for political advocacy NGOs in Israel and the Palestinian Authority is officially dedicated to “combating poverty, securing food, establishing peace, freedom, democracy and human rights, shaping globalisation in a socially equitable manner, and preserving the environment and natural resources.”
 
However, German government funds are also transferred to organizations that contribute to the growing demonization of Israel and BDS (boycott, divestment, and sanctions) campaigns, in direct contradiction to German foreign policy.
 
These NGOs oppose peace and negotiations, and promote narratives that reject the legitimacy of a Jewish state. Additionally, in some cases, German funding has been granted to organizations involved in blatant antisemitism.
 
Millions of euros originating with German taxpayers are provided annually to these NGOs. Direct funding frameworks include the German Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), and other branches; indirect funding includes church-based aid groups and powerful political foundations associated with German political parties.
 
NGO grantees include some of the most radical political advocacy NGOs operating in Israel and the Palestinian Authority. The evidence shows that many recipients of German government funding do not have the competence to advance German objectives in the region.
 
Read full and detailed report:
 
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Old Habits Die Hard: Germany Funding Palestinian Extremism
 
by Peter Martino - Gatestone Institute
 
 
(This article is from April 2012 but still very relevant today)
 
Salam Fayyad, the Prime Minister of the Palestinian National Authority [PNA], visited Berlin with several of his ministers. His visit was successful. The Germans, who pride themselves on being one of the largest sponsors of the Palestinian cause, promised almost €100 million ($133 million) in bilateral German aid to the PNA this year.
 
Germany has a long history of pro-Palestinian activism
going back to the Nazi years
 
By 1935 the Germans were already subsidizing a wide variety of Palestinian organizations. Berlin was especially generous towards Haj Mohammed Amin al-Husseini, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem. The Germans subsidized the Grand Mufti, who led several anti-Jewish pogroms in the Middle East, to the amount of 75,000 reichsmarks per month.
 
In 1937, Husseini's friend Adolf Eichmann attempted to visit Palestine, but the British did not allow him in. Four years later, after the Grand Mufti had met German Chancellor Adolf Hitler in Berlin, Eichmann gave Husseini a tour of Auschwitz and showed him the gas chambers. Husseini reacted with great enthusiasm and began planning another Holocaust in Palestine, for which he asked German assistance.
 
Fortunately, the German defeat in the war prevented the Grand Mufti's plans. The Grand Mufti, who also acted as the religious leader of a Bosnian Muslim SS-division, died in Beirut in 1974, at the age of 77.
 
Today's Nazi admirers:  Palestinian Arabs
 
Palestinian university rally - Nazi salute (photo Tom Gross Media)
In a 2002 interview, his relative, Fatah Chairman Yasser Arafat, a grandson of the Mufti's first cousin, praised Husseini as a great Palestinian hero.
 
In 2006, Arafat's successor, Mahmoud Abbas, the President of the Palestinian National Authority, appointed Muhammad Ahmad Hussein as Grand Mufti of Jerusalem.
 
Three months after Hussein's appointment, the new Grand Mufti stated that suicide bombings against Israelis are "legitimate."
 
Again, at a recent Fatah meeting in January, he quoted anti-Jewish statements advocating the killing of Jews. His statements were broadcast on Palestinian television. There is widespread admiration for Hitler being spread throughout the Palestinian Authority area, where Mein Kampf is still a bestseller.
 
The contemporary Grand Mufti of Jerusalem still adheres to the ideas of his infamous predecessor in the 1930s and 40s. The same applies to the Fatah leadership.
 
"Moderate Peace Partner" Mahmoud Abbas praises the Nazi Grand Mufti
 
Even though PNA President Mahmoud Abbas is perceived by the Western media as a "moderate," he sang the praises of the genocidal wartime Grand Mufti in a 2010 speech.
 
He said: "We must … recall the outstanding [early] leadership of the Palestinian people, the Grand Mufti of Palestine, Haj Mohammed Amin al-Husseini, who sponsored the struggle from the beginning, and sponsored the struggle and displacement for the cause and died away from his home."
 
Al Husseini wanted to cleanse Jerusalem of the Jews.
 
Mahmoud Abbas, too, denies that Jerusalem is a historic Jewish city. In a recent speech in Doha, Qatar, Abbas questioned the Jewish connection to Jerusalem, saying that the city "has always been and will remain an Arab city."
 
Unfortunately, old habits also die hard in Germany. Berlin is still one of the major sponsors of Palestinian activism. This is done in three ways: through the European Union, through bilateral government aid, and through political advocacy non-governmental organizations.
 
Germany pays the Palestinians - who kill Jews
 
Every year, the European Union pays €400 million in so-called development aid to the PNA. The bulk of this money (as with all EU money) comes from Germany. The EU's financial assistance to the Palestinians dates back to 1971. Since then, the EU has become the largest provider of aid to the Palestinians.
 
Berlin also funds Abbas's Palestinian National Authority. Last year, the PNA received €72 million in bilateral German aid. This year, the German government has already promised to give up to €93 million.
 
(In 2012) A delegation including several Palestinian ministers, led by Salam Fayyad, the PNA Prime Minister and a close collaborator of President Abbas, was in Berlin for a meeting of the German-Palestinian Coordination Council.
 
Germany is the first country to hold such bilateral governmental coordination meetings with the PNA. The Council was set up in 2010 to balance Germany's holding similar regular consultations with Israel. The concept has since been imitated by other European nations.
 
"Germany is a friend and a partner of your government and of the Palestinian people," German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle told Fayyad, who returned home with the promise of €40 million from the German taxpayers for the Palestinian police force.
 
"Our aim is a Palestinian state as part of a two-state solution and we support the development of that state not just theoretically, but also practically," Westerwelle said.
 
Germany gives upgraded diplomatic honors to Palestinian Arabs who kill Jews and who profess their intent to kill many more
 
Germany has also formally upgraded the Palestinian mission in Berlin to that of an embassy, allowing the Palestinian representative in Germany to call himself an ambassador. In an op-ed piece in the Arab-language newspaper al-Quds, Westerwelle emphasized that Germany had been helping the Palestinian territories "for decades" and that it is "one of the largest benefactors" of the Palestinian state.
 
Fayyad used the opportunity to criticize what he called "Israeli settlers' violence" against Palestinians, the "excesses of the Israeli security forces" against the 4.5 million Palestinians who live under "occupation," and the "increasing pressure" on Palestinian residents in East Jerusalem.
 
In late April, Nabil Sha'ath, the Palestinian Minister of Planning, will visit Berlin again to discuss other German development projects in the Palestinian territories. German Development Minister Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul said that with its aid to Palestine the Germans wish to "make a statement."
 
Germany makes demands on the Jews it failed to kill during the Holocaust
 
In dealing with Israel, Germany usually demands concessions from Israel towards the Palestinians.
 
One would expect that, in return for lavishly showering the PNA with funds, Berlin would demand that PNA officials refrain from singing the praises of the former Grand Mufti, stop naming streets and schools after terrorists who have killed Israeli civilians, including children, or ban the sale of Mein Kampf in PNA areas, since the copyright of the text belongs to the Bavarian state government and no permission was granted for a new Arab publication of the infamous book. But no, such demands were not made.
 
Germany gives generously to anti-Israel "humanitarian" organizations - No questions asked
 
The German government also provides support via leftist and anarchist Israeli pro-Palestinian NGOs. Most of this money is given through the political foundations of the various German parties, which are subsidized according to the number of seats they hold in the German Parliament, through the Institute for Foreign Relations (IFA), funded by the German Foreign Ministry, through local governments or through church organizations.
 
The political foundations of the leftist parties, such as the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (Social Democratic Party), the Heinrich Böll Stiftung (Green Party), and the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung (Left Party) are particularly active supporters of biased anti-Israeli and pro-Palestinian NGOs. In this way, groups advocating boycotts of Israeli products or international sanctions against the Jewish state are showered with money from German tax payers.
 
The spirit of Eichmann is very much alive in Berlin today
 
It is a disgrace that the German authorities allow this to happen. It looks as if Germany, realizing that it has a "good reputation" among Palestinians and Arabs thanks to its Nazi past, is attempting to avoid everything that might harm its pro-Palestinian reputation. In this sense, it is almost as if the spirit of Eichmann is still very much alive in Berlin today.
 
 
 
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 PALESTINIAN ARABS
  NAZIS THEN, NAZIS NOW
  Same genocidal ideology, same symbols, same goals
 
Islamo-Nazism in Palestine,  then and now

  By Dr. Manfred Gesternfeld

During the German occupation of Europe, the main leader of the Palestinian Arabs was the Mufti of Jerusalem, Mohammed Amin Al-Husseini. He saw major parallels between Islam and Nazism.
 
Al-Husseini identified seven important points of similarity between the two in a lecture to the members of the SS division of Bosnian Muslims which he had helped establish.[1]

The German researcher, Matthias Kuentzel, mentions the mutual common aims of Islam and Nazism in his book in German whose title translates as Jihad and Hatred of Jews,   
  • monotheism, unity of leadership, and the Führer principle
  • notions of obedience and discipline
  • fighting for honor and fighting to die in battle
  • attitude toward community: common interest precedes personal interest
  • valuing motherhood and the prohibition of abortion
  • attitude toward Jews – Islam and National Socialism are close to each other in the battle against Judaism
  • glorification of labor and creation –Islam protects and respects labor in every way[2]

During the Second World War, Al-Husseini planned – once the Germans had conquered Palestine – to establish an Auschwitz-type extermination complex, complete with a crematorium This would be built for the purpose of gassing the Jews from Palestine and Arab countries.[3]

For a long time the leader of the Palestinian Arab “moderates” was Ragheb bey el-Nashashibi, the mayor of Jerusalem. He also came out in favor of the mass murder of Jews.
 
After the 1929 riots in Mandate-era Palestine, the non-Jewish French writer, Albert Londres, asked El-Nashashibi, why the Arabs had murdered the old, pious Jews in Hevron and Safed, with whom they had no quarrel.

The mayor answered: “In a war you behave like in a war. You don’t kill whom you want. You kill whom you find. Next time they will all be killed, young and old.”
 
Later on, Londres spoke again to the mayor and tested him ironically by saying: “You cannot kill all the Jews. There are 150,000 of them.” Nashashibi answered “in a soft voice, ‘Oh no, it’ll take two days.’”[4]
 
Al-Husseini can be considered the predecessor of Hamas.
 
hamassalute
HAMAS NAZI SALUTE
For the basics on Hamas’ genocidal intentions, one can find some examples directly from its party program, the Hamas Charter.
 
Article 7 of this document lays the groundwork for its mass murder ideology when it says that Hamas aspires to:
 
“the realization of Allah's promise, no matter how long that should take. The Prophet, Allah bless him and grant him salvation, has said:  "The Day of Judgement will not come about until Moslems fight the Jews (killing the Jews), when the Jew will hide behind stones and trees. The stones and trees will say O Moslems, O Abdulla, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him. Only the Gharkad tree…would not do that because it is one of the trees of the Jews." [5]
 
Whoever chooses to follow the more recent genocidal expressions of Hamas can best visit the website of Palestinian Media Watch (PMW).
 
A recent example of Hamas’ Islamo-Nazism activity is a recorded statement by Hamas Chief of Staff Muhammad Deif, who announced during the Gaza war, "Today you [Israelis] are fighting divine soldiers, who love death for Allah like you love life, and who compete among themselves for Martyrdom like you flee from death.”  

PMW also mentions Hamas TV, that recently broadcast statements from Hamas leader and former Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh. He said, “We love death like our enemies love life! We love Martyrdom, the way in which [Hamas] leaders died."
 
Hamas TV also broadcast a sermon  repeating the Hamas ideology which claims that according to Islam, it is Muslim destiny to exterminate the Jews. PMW quotes many similar statements calling for the murder of Israelis and Jews.[6]  

Hamas does not hold the Palestinian monopoly for aiming at the genocide of Jews. The calls for mass murder of Jews can be found, be it in smaller numbers, in other Palestinian Arab media. An example of that was in 2000, when Dr. Ahmed Abu Halabiyah, Rector of Advanced Studies at the Islamic University of Gaza spoke on PA TV, the official channel of the Palestinian Authority (PA).
 
He gave a Friday television sermon and his call was thus part of the governmental, academic, and religious spheres of the PA and Palestinian society.

Halabiyah said, “The Jews are the Jews.... They do not have any moderates or any advocates of peace. They are all liars. They must be butchered and must be killed.... The Jews are like a spring - as long as you step on it with your foot it doesn't move. But if you lift your foot from the spring, it hurts you and punishes you.... It is forbidden to have mercy in your hearts for the Jews in any place and in any land, make war on them anywhere that you find yourself.  Any place that you meet them, kill them.”[7]

Examples of Palestinian genocidal ambitions are unlimited. Many in Europe, including political parties, media and important actors of civil society, who claim to be critical toward Israel, remain silent about these calls for mass murder by the Palestinian Islamo-Nazis. Their silence renders them indirect helpers of these preachers of mass murder. 

Sources:
[1] Matthias Küntzel, Djihad und Judenhass, (Freiburg: ça ira-Verlag, 2003), 39. [German]
[2] Ibid.
[3] Manfred Gerstenfeld interview with Nadav Shragai, “Libel: Israel Intends to Destroy the Al-Aksa Mosque”, Israel National News, 16 October 2013.

[4] Albert Londres, Le Juif Errant Est Arrivé (Paris: Arléa, 1997), 209. [French]
[5] http://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/hamas.asp
[6] www.palwatch.org/

[7] Itamar Marcus and Barbara Crook, “Kill a Jew – Go to Heaven:  The Perception of the Jew in Palestinian Society”, Jewish Political Studies Review, Vol. 17, Nos. 3 & 4 (Fall 2005), 127.
 
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Dr Manfred Gesternfeld has been a long-term adviser on strategy issues to the boards of several major multinational corporations in Europe and North America.He is board member and former chairman of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs and recipient of the LIfetime Achievement Award (2012) of the Journal for the Study of Anti-Semitism.
 
Photo of Palestinian university students - http://www.tomgrossmedia.com/mideastdispatches/archives/001406.html
 
 
RELATED
 
Dr Gesternfeld mentions mostly Hamas, but Fatah, the "moderate partners for peace," is just as genocidal in their acts and expressed intentions. 
 
The two factions differ in methods, not in their ultimate goal of destroying Israel and the Jews.  Fatah has opted for diplomacy and dismantling Israel one "peace" at the time, while Hamas makes no compromises.
 
Photo: 'Moderate' Palestinians routinely display their beloved Nazi flags. 
 
Read the Fatah and Hamas charters here  -  No difference between 'moderate' and 'extremist'

'Moderate' Palestinian Authority denies Israel's right to exist - In their own words
http://www.palwatch.org/main.aspx?fi=433

More on what Palestinian officials say about Israel and the Jews - in their own words
http://www.palwatch.org/
 
September 2014  -  Hamas, and Islamic Nazi party - http://www.newenglishreview.org/Joseph_S._Spoerl/Hamas:_An_Islamic_Nazi_Party/
 
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"Moderate" Fatah brags on Facebook of having murdered eleven thousand Israelis.
 
Fox News - "Moderate" Fatah, on its official Facebook page boasted of killing thousands of Jews.  In their own words:  
 
Fatah has killed 11,000 Israelis; Fatah has sacrificed 170,000 Martyrs (Shahids)...; Fatah was the first to carry out operations (i.e., terror attacks) during the first Intifada...

Fatah was the first to fight in the second Intifada (i.e., PA terror campaign 2000-2005)...

Fatah led the Palestinian attack on Israel in the UN... Fatah leads the peaceful popular resistance against Israel... Stop and think before you attack [Fatah]."

Fatah has been led since 2005 by Mahmoud Abbas whose benign international media persona portrays an image of a venerable elder statesman.

Read more - http://www.foxnews.com/world/2014/08/12/fatah-boasts-killing-israelis-even-as-it-seeks-to-end-war-in-gaza/

More details here - http://www.palwatch.org/main.aspx?fi=157&doc_id=12294

 
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THE NAZI ORIGIN OF THE PALESTINIAN MOVEMENT

 
More on the German-Arab collaboration in Jew hatred and Genocide
 
 
Video - Nazi Collaborators - The Grand Mufti of Jerusalem Haj Amin el Husseini
44 minutes long 
 
The Mufti of Jerusalem's conversation with Adolf Hitler
 
Neo-Nazis helped terrorists in the massacre of Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics
 
Tell Children the Truth - Documentation on the Nazi-Palestinian war against the Jews
 
 
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CURIOUSLY, THE COMMUNISTS TOO HAVE BEEN AT THE CENTER OF PROMOTING ARAB TERROR AGAINST THE ISRAEL
 
The Communist Roots of Palestinian Terror
 
This is a fascinating in-depth essay on the very active Communist participation in the War against Israel, through arming and indoctrinating Palestinian leaders and terrorists.
http://archive.frontpagemag.com/readArticle.aspx?ARTID=29207

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THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT ALSO FUNDS PALESTINIAN TERROR

AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN TAX PAYERS FUNDING THE MURDER OF JEWS IN ISRAEL
 
PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY PAYS UP TO $3,400 A MONTH TO TERRORISTS  -  US TAXPAYERS' MONEY

 The United States too is funding Palestinian terror.  It is all based on the deceiving notion that there are moderate Palestinians.  Not such thing.  They all want the dismantlement of Israel.  The moderates and the more militant Palestinians differ only in the methods to achieve such goal:  Whether by terror or by partitioning Israel one "piece" at the time.
http://ottersandsciencenews.blogspot.ca/2014/03/american-and-european-tax-payers.html

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