From Ha’aretz:
Advisers appointed by British Prime Minister Tony Blair are proposing that Britain get rid of Holocaust Memorial Day because Muslims find it offensive, the British Sunday Times reported.
The draft proposals – which provoked a backlash from British Jewish leaders – want to replace Holocaust Memorial Day with a Genocide Day that would include recognition of Muslim deaths in the West Bank and Gaza, Chechnya and Bosnia, the Times said.
A Home Office spokesman said it would consider the proposals but said it regarded the Holocaust as a “defining tragedy in European history,” according to the report.
“The very name Holocaust Memorial Day sounds too exclusive to many young Muslims,” a member of one of the committees was quoted as saying. “It sends out the wrong signals: that the lives of one people are to be remembered more than others. It’s a grievance that extremists are able to exploit.”
I can see the argument (though I’m not saying I agree with it) for replacing Holocaust Memorial Day with Genocide Day, especially because Britain played no direct role in the Holocaust. But to do so because “Muslims find” Holocaust Memorial Day “offensive” is, to say the least, offensive in itself. Even worse is the idea that a new “Genocide Day” would include “Muslim deaths in the West Bank and Gaza,” thus giving credence to the absurd contention that Israeli policies in those areas amount to “genocide,” and thus replacing a memorial to victims of the Holocaust with the fantastical political propaganda of those whose political ancestors (e.g., the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Muhammed Amin al-Husseini) allied with the Nazis.
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