KETAKUTAN YAHUDI KE ATAS MAHATHIR
Parti Islam Semalaysia ataupun
PAS sangat sinonim dengan mencipta pembohongan demi pembohongan. Dari berbagai
khabar angin yang disebarkan di masjid mengenai kematian Dr Mahathir,
pembohongan demi pembohongan di sajikan kepada khalayak Muslimin dan Muslimah
di Malaysia yang ternyata amat menyalahi dengan pengajaran ISLAM yang tulus dan
suci.
Pembohongan
terbaru yang berleluasa semasa di LUNAS adalah mengenai PM sebagai pendukung
negara YAHUDI. Ini adalah penipuan besar yang Insyallah PAS akan dapat
pembalasan yang sewajarnya.
Di
bawah ini di lampirkan artikel mengenai ketakutan Yahudi ke atas Mahathir.
Insyallah rakan rakan dapat menilai sendiri dari artikel ini adakah Mahathir
sebagai pendukung Yahudi ataupun seteru utama Yahudi.
Jawapannya
terserlah. Mahathir Mohammad, adalah seteru utama Yahudi. Sayang seribu kali
sayang penduduk LUNAS tiadak dapat berita yang sebenarnya. Tapi masih mempunyai
banyak masa untuk memusnah kan pembohongan PAS ini, insyallah kita sebarkan
artikel di bawah kepada semua :
Pemberitahuan:
Artikel di bawah adalah dari pertubuhan Yahudi sendiri: Institute of the World
Jewish Congress.
Artikel
ini di petik dari: Virtual Jerusalem "The Protocols" Malaysian Style:
the case of Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad At issue: The recent statements by
Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad accusing Jews of conspiring to
undermine the stability of the economies of Malaysia and its regional neighbors
provoked the indignation of Jewish organizations. This response, however,
produced little resonance among Asian leaders. Mahathir has a long history of
antipathy towards Jews, an attitude which he links to his domestic political
agenda. The prime minister has frequently used Jews (there are almost none in
Malaysia) as a scapegoat for political and economic setbacks. The fact that
Mahathir?s hostile remarks did not earn the censure of other Asian heads of
state points to the need for deepening awareness of the pernicious effects of
antisemitism - and of the role of political leaders in developing a tradition
of tolerance
A
history of antipathy towards Jews The recent remarks by Dr. Mahathir Mohamad,
Prime Minister of Malaysia, constitute the latest chapter in a long personal history
of antagonism towards Jews and Israel. There are almost thirty years of
recorded anti-Jewish antipathy from Mahathir stemming back to his days as an
up-and-coming political leader.
The policies of Mahathir and the ruling United Malays National Organization
(UMNO) center on raising the socioeconomic status of the Malay ethnic majority,
which is Moslem. In relation to the Chinese and Indian communities, Malays were
less inclined to progress in business and educational fields. The UMNO
political movement has cultivated the Malays? contribution to a growing economy
through a slate of preferential and encouragement schemes; within a generation
Malays have assumed many leadership positions in the quickly growing economy.
This agenda is prominently accompanied by a determined effort to develop
Islamic pride. This religious dimension to the political program has frequently
been expressed through empathy for the Palestinian and Arab causes. Classic
antisemitic portrayals of Jews have been invoked to help explain the Malay
people?s struggle to raise themselves in a world filled with challenges. The
crisis currently affecting the Malaysian economy has seen the stockmarket
plunge some 50% since the beginning of 1997, and the value of the Malaysian
currency, the ringgit, itself fall by over 30% to its lowest value since 1973.
These dire figures undermine the confidence that Malaysians have in their
remarkable and substantial economic progress - and place a question mark over
the head of the country's dominating prime minister of close to two decades.
There
has been no organized Jewish community in Malaysia since colonial days. For the
few years that Singapore was part of Malaysia (1963-65), the small number of
Jews in that city comprised the Malaysian Jewish community. Since secession,
only some dozens of expatriate (mostly American) Jews working in the fields of
business or education live in the larger cities of Kuala Lumpur and Penang.
Essentially, Mahathir's hostility is not only a case of antisemitism without
Jews - but antisemitism without even any history of interaction with Jews.
Mahathir?s
Malaysia gives voice to antisemitism For Mahathir, Jews have served as an
additional, if imaginary, force working against the Malays' development. The
rationale for this supposed Jewish counterforce has been, for example, that
Malaysia's progress undermines the economic interests of Jews, or that Jews are
naturally hostile to Moslems, or due to the affinity between the Palestinian
and Malay causes. In a 1970 book outlining his view of the problems facing the
Malay people, The Malay Dilemma, Mahathir wrote that "the Jews for example
are not merely hook-nosed, but understand money instinctively." Prime
minister since 1981, Mahathir?s government has long been an adversary of Israel
in international forums, particularly in the United Nations, and actively
advocated the economic boycott. Throughout the 1980?s Mahathir spoke of foreign
(and critical) newspapers being controlled by Jews, and of Zionist plots to
undermine his government. A litany of other incidents are evidence of continued
antagonism, such as the following:
in
1983, the Protocols of the Elders of Zion was printed in Malaysia; the 1986
visit of Israeli President Chaim Herzog to Singapore was fiercely criticized by
the Malaysian government, and the Malaysian high commissioner was temporarily
withdrawn to Kuala Lumpur; in a 1986 speech at meeting of the Non-Aligned
Movement, Mahathir stated that "the expulsion of Jews from the Holy Land
2,000 years ago and the Nazi oppression of Jews have taughtthem nothing. If
anything at all, it has transformed the Jews into the very monsters that they
condemn so roundly in their propaganda material. They have been apt pupils of
the late Dr. Goebbels"; and in 1994 the Malaysian film censor refused to
license the screening of "Schindler?s List" because of the film?s
apparently excessive sympathy towards Jews. The censor wrote that "its
seems the illustration is a propaganda with the purpose of asking for sympathy,
as well as to tarnish the other [German] race."
In most cases, Jews are associated with classical antisemitic characteristics:
parties to international conspiracies, an excessive propensity for material
gain, causing unemployment and economic instability, and animosity towards Moslems.
Mahathir
targets Soros - and the Jews The recent crisis of confidence in Asian
currencies, which saw many Asian currencies plunge in the months of
October-November 1997, had a dire effect on the Malaysian ringgit. Speaking at
the International Monetary Fund?s conference in Hong Kong in October 1997, when
the crisis was shaking markets across the region, Mahathir spoke of the
presence of "sinister powers" working against the progress of Asian
economies. He criticized financier George Soros for having caused the currency
instability - but one of a number of similar allegations against Soros - and
called him a "moron".
On
his return to Malaysia, Mahathir repeated that Soros was culpable for the
ringgit?s plunge. Describing Soros, who is of Jewish origin, as a Jew, Mahathir
went on to say that Jews were generally responsible for the currency?s
collapse:
"We
do not want to say that this is a plot by the Jews, but in reality it is a Jew
who triggered the currency plunge, and coincidentally Soros is a Jew. It is
also a coincidence that Malaysians are mostly Moslem. Indeed, the Jews are not
happy to see Moslems progress. If it were Palestine, the Jews would rob
Palestinians. Thus this is what they are doing to our country."
The
prime minister subsequently denied that either he was antisemitic or that his
comments should be interpreted as such. When journalists suggested such,
Mahathir responded that "I merely stated that incidentally this person
[Soros] is a Jew, and incidentally we are Moslems." Some weeks later,
Mahathir reiterated that "I did not say there was a Jewish conspiracy.
That was one of the options. We did not accuse the Jews of causing the currency
plunge, but it looked like they triggered the currency crisis. Are we not
allowed to say anything about it? We feel as if we are not allowed to say
anything irritating concerning other countries."
Political
observers in Malaysia suggested that Mahathir?s comments were intended to
regain support amongst Moslem traditionalists; Mahathir?s modernist approach to
Islamic practices has stirred criticism from the traditionalists. Yet his
invocation of antisemitism when confronted by both economic troubles and ethnic
uncertainty is a familiar and disturbing form of scapegoating.
The
World Jewish Congress announced that it would lodge a complaint with the UN
Human Rights Commission in Geneva. Meantime, members of the US House of
Representatives passed a motion demanding that Mahathir retract his
"hateful" words - or resign. This motion was overwhelmingly rejected
by the Malaysian lower house of parliament in a debate about perceived American
and Jewish interference in domestic politics. Indeed, Mahathir commented that
"I was accused of being antisemitic. I do not know if the world functions
this way. Does a leader need to apologize when his opinions oppose American
politics?"
Conclusion
In the postwar period, it has become rare for state leaders to declare
antisemitic opinions. When outgoing Swiss President Pascal Delamuraz claimed
that Jews were blackmailing the Swiss people, the Jewish response was a rapid
demand for a retraction and an apology.
That
Mahathir could give voice to conspiracy theories at international forums - as
he did with his "sinister powers" insinuation at the IMF conference -
is a cause for renewed concern. There was no outcry from participants at the
conference, even though Mahathir?s hostility towards Soros left little doubt as
to the nature of the conspiracy he was suggesting. Asian leaders - and other
participants at the IMF gathering - either saw no reason to comment on
Mahathir?s statement, or felt muted. Being somewhat distant from the European
scene, Asians are perhaps less conscious of the dire effects of antisemitism