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By

Winston Pickett

Analysis

High priest of Jew-hate is gone, but not his ideas

May 5, 2011 10:03
Bin Laden: driven by antisemitism
1 min read

For all the avalanche of analyses and op-eds since the death of Osama bin Laden, it is essential to remember one thing: antisemitism was at the core of his hatred - and remains the basis of the al Qaida ideology.
Most commentators seek to portray bin Laden as universally hateful - an enemy of Western civilization. But this "universal" also hides a specific truth.

Just as the Holocaust has universal lessons because Nazism threatened humanity, as Lucy Davidowitz's monumental The War Against the Jews demonstrated, a deep, pathological hatred of Jews and Judaism served as its engine. Judeophobia was the driving impulse around which Nazism coalesced.

Similarly, al Qaida is a universal threat, but bin Laden's insatiable hatred for America for having "invaded" Saudi Arabia - allegedly his reason for taking his brand of jihad to the world stage - was driven by an apocalyptic Islamist theory according to which all Muslims would wage war against Jewry at the End of Days.

bin Laden's world-view was also steeped in the ideas of thinkers like Sayyid Qutb, whose writings, including Our Struggle with the Jews, have served as a philosophical grounding for much of radical Islamism.

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