For the past 10 years I have taught a seminar at the London School of Economics and Political Science entitled ‘Muslim-Jewish Relations: History and Memory in the Middle East and Europe’. Many of the students are young Jewish or Muslim men and women from London, who grew up among the other group and have a desire to learn more about them.
When the topic is ‘Judeo-Muslim Religious Symbiosis’ I pass out two dozen notecards with hand-written phrases on them. The students’ assignment is to say whether the phrase on the card refers to Judaism or Islam. As many times as not, the answer is both – from “Jerusalem is a holy city” and “Dietary restrictions: no pork!” to “Purification before prayer” and “Circumcise your sons”. How many know about such similarity, the intimate rivalry and cooperation?
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With this knowledge, is it right to depict relations between Jews and Muslims in a negative way? Is the last century of conflict between Israelis and Palestinians representative of the past? My book, Children of Abraham, tells the true story of the relationship of Jews and Muslims from the seventh century to the 21st century. It covers 1,415 years, from around 610, when Muslims say that Muhammad started to preach, to today, in the Middle East and in Europe.
There are four moments across this history when Jews are either more powerful than Muslims or hold power over them. For the rest of this history, Muslims hold power over Jews. At times, Christians hold power over both, favouring one group or the other, usually the Jews. And whenever Christians enter the scene, relations between Jews and Muslims worsen.
Over the centuries, we see the same themes repeating: the Jew as ally of the Muslim; the Muslim as the saviour of the Jew; Jewish-Muslim religious and secular symbiosis; the rise of elite Jews to positions of wealth and influence and their subsequent fall as Muslims perceive a violation of the dhimma pact (pact of protection); the triangular relation with Christians which worsens Jewish-Muslim relations; and the political use of myth and counter-myth obscuring that history.
