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Those who seek boycotts of Yad Vashem do not speak for Palestinians or Muslims

Fiyaz Mughal condemns those who singled out a Golders Green mosque for working with the Holocaust museum on an exhibition

January 8, 2019 14:08
The Hussainiyat Al-Rasool Al-Adham mosque
3 min read

The Centre for Islamic Enlightening has dropped hosting an exhibition on those Muslims who saved Jews in Albania. The reason given was that “it has no connection to any foreign government and stays well clear of anything political or perceived to be political”. The real reason was that it was pressured to do so through tweets which suggested hosting the exhibition would legitimise Israel's Yad Vashem, the leading Holocaust memorial institute globally.

As Roshan Salih, the 5Pillars editor said on Twitter, “No to normalisation. Boycott Israel and Israeli institutions." This led to Iranian and Arabic websites highlighting the exhibition in negative terms and led to what Centre staff said were security risks for them. In other words, they felt threatened.

The Centre, which is based in the Golders Green Hippodrome, met opposition in November 2017 from a small number of hardline members of Jewish communities, who objected to it being located within this historic site. Numerous faith leaders and the then President of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, Jonathan Arkush, came to its defence. This led to strong ties between the Centre and local and national Jewish institutions and meant that the link was a source of pride for both British Jewish and Muslim communities. 

Fast forward to last week and attempts by the Barnet Multi-Faith Forum to get the Centre to host an exhibition by Yad Vashem around stories of Albanian Muslims who saved Jews in the Holocaust. This exhibition somewhat mirrored the exhibition that Faith Matters, the organisation that I founded, put together in 2010 on the back of the Righteous Muslims booklet that Es Rosen and I put together. We wanted to find and highlight lost stories of Muslims who saved Jews.