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Jews & Bosnian Muslims Have Joint Experience in Genocide
Jews & Bosnian Muslims Have Joint Experience in Genocide
Dr. Mustafa Cerić is the Grand Mufti of Bosnia-Herzegovina and a member of the Committee on
Conscience fighting against the Holocaust denial
We firmly declare that Israelis and Palestinians have the right to their own states, sovereignty and
security and that every peace process adhering to these aims ought to be supported.
Facing the lack of knowledge, the prejudices and competing sentiments which we all reject, we believe
in acquainting ourselves of one-another, and in the primacy of History.
Therefore we affirm, above all political views, our decisiveness to defend the historic truth as there is
no peace based upon lies. The Holocaust is a historical fact: a genocide in which some six Million
European Jews perished.
Its magnanimity is universal, as values of dignity and respect of human being is what the Nazi
Germany and its European allies sought to destroy. Denial of that crime against humanity is not only an
affront to the memories of the victims but an affront to the very idea of civilization. Therefore we
believe that learning about this tragedy is a cause for all who have the heart and will to prevent future
genocides.
We call upon all people of conscience in the world to work with us
The same demand for truth obligates us to remember the good people in Europe as well as among
Arabs and Muslims.
We declare, together, our mutual wish to promote truthful, open and brotherly dialogue.
In that spirit we gathered in this project “Aladdin”. We call upon all people of conscience in the world
to work with us in this joint venture of mutual acquaintance, respect and peace.
Unite in the struggle against anti-Semitism and Islamophobia
In this regard, Reisu-l-ulema, Dr. Mustafa Cerić, stated in Paris: I thank Mr. David de Rothschild to
participate in this interesting project hosted by the UNESCO and supported by world statesmen,
intellectuals, historians and theologians.
The importance of this is augmented because of the fact that I come from Bosnia and Herzegovina
where, at the end of the 20-th century, a genocide was perpetrated upon Muslims in Europe, several
decades after the Holocaust. This is, therefore, the right opportunity and place for me to remind all that
Muslims and Jews have reasons to gather around a joint project such as this one and unite in the
struggle against anti-Semitism and Islam-phobia, which phobia has gathered speed of recent.
July 11th – the day of remembrance of the Srebrenica Genocide
It suffices to state that Muslims and Jews have a joint experience of persecution and genocide in
Europe: both were expelled from Spain (Endelus) in the fifteenth century, with the Sephardic Jews
finding a safe haven in Sarajevo, which is best witnessed by the Sarajevo Holy Haggadah, and both
suffered a genocide in the twentieth century, Jews from the Nazis and Bosnian Muslims from the
Serbian aggressors.
It is for that reason that we respect the fact that the European Parliament adopted, on January 15, 2009,
a resolution to proclaim July 11th as day of remembrance of the Srebrenica Genocide and called upon
all “people of conscience” to remember, on July 11th, the crime against humanity which was
committed on July 11th, 1995, in Srebrenica against Bosnian Muslims and, consequently, we call for all
to take an oath that it will never happen again to anybody.
We have committed to develop the Muslim-Jewish cultural dialogue
I am happy to advise you about the initiative “With culture to unity”, which Dr. Vladimir Salamon,
Director of Jewish cultural group “Bejahad”, and I, initiated and signed on September 9th, 2006 in
Hvar, Croatia, and took on to develop the Muslim-Jewish dialogue as there are more positive, rather
than negative, historical examples for us to learn from and help one another free ourselves from
prejudices and stereotyping which take us further away from our unity in resisting anti-Semitism which
is on the increase, and Islam-phobia which endangers the world peace and stability – were the parting
words of Reisu-l-ulema Dr. Mustafa Cerić in Paris.