UN: JEWS CAUSE ANTI-SEMITISM
Anne Bayefsky's article (below) draws attention to a United Nations conference on racism and antisemitism, featuring experts in promoting racism and antisemitism—including the slick Islamist talking head Tariq Ramadan:
Your Tax Dollars at Work.
Yesterday the House International Relations Committee revealed that money from the United Nations Oil for Food program, which was supposed to provide humanitarian assistance to the Iraqi people, helped pay the families of Palestinian suicide bombers. This shouldn’t come as a surprise. The U.N. has a problem with anti-Semitism: It doesn’t know what it is.
In order to figure it out, the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights and Unesco invited a group of experts to Barcelona last week. Their mission: to provide the U.N. special rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, Doudou DiĆ©ne, with advice on anti-Semitism as well as “Christianophobia and Islamophobia.”
From whom did the U.N. get advice? There was Tariq Ramadan of Switzerland’s Fribourg University, who was denied entry to the U.S. in August on the basis of a law concerning aliens who have used a “position of prominence within any country to endorse or espouse terrorist activity” or are considered a “public safety risk or a national security threat.” But apparently the U.N. thought it was worth listening to the views on racism of someone who said on Sept. 25, 2001, that “[Osama] Bin Laden is perhaps a useful straw man, like Saddam Hussein, whose diabolical representation perhaps serves other geo-strategic, economic or political designs.”
Then there was anti-Semitism expert Esther Benbassa from the Sorbonne. She wrote in September 2000, “Today, especially in the United States, Jewish philanthropy is exerted in the name of the perennization of the memory of the Shoah [Holocaust]. The money flows to create pulpits on anti-Semitism and the genocide, to finance museums, and research. As if nothing else were significant or had ever existed.”
In her written contribution to the meeting, she artfully refers to “merging the image of the extermination with the might of Israel against the Palestinians, the one image reducing the significance of the other, and the Jew as both victim and executioner.” Maybe the U.N. tapped her for her expertise at encouraging anti-Semitism?
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