A Muslim extremist shouldn't have been invited to a Jewish event

AuthorMoshe Phillips‏
Date18 December 2020
Published date18 December 2020
Publication titleIsrael National News (Israel)
But the real outrage here is that he was invited in the first place.

Salam Al-Marayati, longtime president of the Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC), was invited by a group called Jews United for Democracy to speak as part of its panel on "After Four Years of Division, Tension and Bigotry—Now What?"

Yet Al-Marayati himself is a promoter of division, tension and bigotry. Bigotry against Jews, that is.

Al-Marayati's organization, MPAC, publicly defended infamous French Holocaust-denier Roger Garaudy, after Garaudy was fined by the French government for his denial activities.

Al-Marayati was a longtime member of the small editorial board of The Minaret, a magazine closely associated with MPAC leaders, which in the 1990s and early 2000s repeatedly published grotesque political cartoons depicting Jews and Israel controlling the American government. That theme was consistent with Al-Marayati's assertion that the U.S. "is in full partnership with Israel. Where Israel goes, our government follows."

Al-Marayati has had a long association with white supremacist William Baker, the onetime chairman of the extremist Populist Party, which was founded by a late neo-Nazi leader / Holocaust denier named Willis Carto, in 1984. MPAC has invited Baker to speak at a number of events. At MPAC's "United for Al Quds Conference" in 2002, Al-Marayati himself introduced and praised Baker.

Comparing Israel to Nazi Germany is standard fare for Al-Marayati. For example, writing in the notoriously anti-Israel magazine Washington Report on Middle East Affairs in June 1994, Marayati asserted: "Just as Hitler forged a conflict between Judaism and Christianity, apologists for Israel crave for Islam to be at odds with both Judaism and Christianity."

Al-Marayati's declaration... immediately after the 9/11 Islamic terrorist attacks, was that ''If we're going to look at suspects, we should look to the groups that benefit the most from these kinds of incidents, and I think we should put the state of Israel on the suspect list..."

Let it be noted that the U.S. government, together with the 30 other member-states of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, uses a definition of antisemitism which states unequivocally that "Drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis" is anti-Semitic.

Al-Marayati's ugly record of Israel-bashing also includes his declaration, immediately after the 9/11 Islamic terrorist attacks, that ''If we're going to look at suspects, we...

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