Muslim, Jewish leaders share sadness over fighting
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Deirdre Newman
NEWPORT-MESA -- Area leaders of Jewish and Muslim congregations are
divided over assigning blame in the current Mideast fighting, but they
say they share the same sadness over the lives lost there during the past
week.
“Whoever we are -- whether it be Muslim, Christian, Jewish -- I remind
our congregation to focus on the issue,” said Sadullah Khan, imam of the
Islamic Center of Irvine. “How just and fair are we? What do we believe
the god of humanity would be pleased with?”
Khan said he has focused on the importance of social justice as a way
of achieving peace.
“Just asking for peace in a vacuum is not practical in the absence of
the framework of justice,” Khan said.
Khan said that neither the suicide bombing attacks by Palestinians nor
the Israeli retaliation is justified. The essential question, he said, is
who is occupying whose land? The Palestinians claim Israel is occupying
their land, while the Israelis say they won possession of the land after
the 1967 war.
The United Nations should send an international peacekeeping force to
the region to try to negotiate a settlement with the cooperation of both
sides, Khan recommended.
Rabbi Mark S. Miller of Temple Bat Yahm in Newport Beach, on the other
hand, said Israel’s use of force in retaliating is justified.
“Israel responds as would any government whose first obligation is to
protect its citizens,” Miller said. “Israel responds as America is
responding to a terrorist attack on its soil by invading a country and
hitting the enemy in a very punishing manner.”
Miller also argues that the flash points of the war -- especially the
West Bank -- are not “occupied” territories, but “disputed” territories
since Israel conquered them during an Arab-initiated war.
Miller contends that the violence will abate only when the
Palestinians cease the suicide bombings.
“It is only when the Palestinians stop calling murderers martyrs and
realize that they cannot destroy Israel in this way or wear Israel down
that the lines of communication will then be open,” Miller said. “And
Israel, as it has always been, will discuss the very difficult issues
that must be addressed in order that there be not peace, but an end to
war and a lack of terror.”
Miller equated the situation to the decades-long conflict in Northern
Ireland over English rule of the area and emphasized that there has to be
a cooling-off period that lasts for a significant amount of time to
create trust between the two sides.
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