WASHINGTON,
November 12 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A popular U.S.
televangelist’s accusation that Muslims are “worse than the Nazis”
and call for Jews to wake up to the threat drew fire on Tuesday,
November 12, from a leading American-Islamic group which warned the
comments could spark violence.
In
his remarks, Christian preacher and conservative commentator Pat
Robertson also denounced Middle East peace efforts as “an absolute
illusion” and accused a senior U.S. diplomat of harboring anti-Israel
views.
The
one-time presidential hopeful, who has been highly critical of Islam in
the past, claimed Muslims were bent on exterminating Jews, citing select
passages out of context from the Qur’an that liken Jews to apes and
pigs, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
“Somehow
I wish the Jews in America would wake up, open their eyes and read what
is being said about them,” Robertson told viewers of his Christian
Broadcasting Network news program late Monday, November 11.
“This
is worse than the Nazis,” he said. “Adolf Hitler was bad, but what
the Muslims want to do to the Jews is worse.”
Robertson,
whose previous anti-Islam comments have been denounced by Jewish and
Muslims groups alike, said those who criticized him - whom he termed
“so-called doves” - did not understand the situation.
“If
I say something that Islam is, you know, an erroneous religion, then I
get criticized by the Anti-Defamation League,” he said, referring to
the prominent U.S.-based Jewish advocacy group.
“You
just want to say: ‘When are you going to open your eyes and see who
your enemy is.’ Those people want to destroy Jews,” Robertson said.
The
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) on Tuesday denounced
Robertson’s remarks as “lies, distortions and outright bigotry.”
“It’s
a shame coming from someone who claims to be a man of the cloth,” said
Hodan Hassan, a spokeswoman for the group.
“He
is doing a lot more to increase tensions and maybe violence among
different ethnicities and religions than sowing the seeds of peace,”
she said, maintaining that Robertson was using two passages from the
Qu’ran deceitfully.
“It's
outlandish and a total distortion,” Hassan said, noting that the
Qur’an contains numerous calls for inter-faith harmony and demands
respect for other religions.
Because
Christian Broadcasting Network programming is broadcast in more than 180
countries around the world, she said the U.S. State Department should
for “consistency’s sake” voice concern about Robertson’s latest
remarks.
Last
week, the State Department said it had expressed reservations to
Egyptian authorities about a television series airing there that draws
on the infamous tract “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion.”
“Our
community is also hurt by hate speech,” Hassan said.
Robertson’s
comments were just the latest in a string of anti-Islamic remarks from
prominent U.S. conservative Christians in the aftermath of the September
11 terrorist attacks.
Earlier
the hate speech of Baptist minister Jerry Falwell, who in a television
interview last month called the Prophet Mohammed (pbuh) “a
terrorist,” resulted in the death of 8 people in India.
His
comments sparked international outrage and deadly riots in the Indian
city of Bombay. Falwell later apologized.
Franklin
Graham, son of the noted preacher Billy Graham, has also been accused of
making defamatory statements about Islam.
Robertson,
however, went beyond criticizing Islam in the Monday broadcast,
suggesting that alleged Muslim duplicity undermined the entire
foundation of land-for-peace basis of efforts to end the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
“The
idea that you’re going to make peace with the Muslim world by giving
them territory is an absolute illusion,” he said.
Muslim
beliefs about Jews are “not exactly conducive to peace and comity and
brotherhood,” he added.
Earlier
in the program, Robertson took aim at U.S. Deputy Secretary of State for
Near East Affairs David Satterfield, who has just begun a five-day
mission to the region, accusing him of sacrificing Israel’s interests
for those of Arab nations.
“The
thing that worries me is this David Satterfield,” he said. “He is
from all indications very much pro-Arab, anti-Israel. He has said and
acted in the past (in a way to) lead one to believe that he is not in
favor of what the Jews want to do.”
Robertson
did not provide evidence of the allegations but said that Satterfield
was responsible for holding up legislation that would have punished
Syria for harboring terrorists.
“I
must say I am not a great fan of the State Department and he is another
one that I am not a fan of,” Robertson said.