At a time when the Muslim world seems to have been taken
over by Islamic extremism, worshipping shahidim and virulent
hatred of Israel and the west, Sheikh Prof. Abdul Hadi Palazzi
is an outspoken critic of this fanaticism, suicide bombings
and jihad and supports the "Jewish divine right" to the Land
of Israel.
With a doctorate in Islamic sciences from the Institute for
Islamic Studies and Research in Naples (by authorization of
the former Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia), and ijazzah
(authorization to teach) both Koranic exegesis and Islamic law
from the prestigious University of al-Azhar as-Sharif in
Cairo, Palazzi backs his somewhat surprising positions with
citations from the Koran and traditional Muslim sources.
The 45-year-old Sunni scholar was in Israel earlier this
month, his first visit since shortly before 9/11, to attend a
meeting of the newly-reconstituted Sanhedrin (religious high
court, led by Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz), lecture on Wahhabi
terrorism and visit the Jewish community in Hebron.
Speaking with In Jerusalem, Palazzi states that he
views the dominance of Saudi Arabia and its Wahhabi heresy as
the main problem facing the Islamic world today. He views
Wahhabi as a "totalitarian cult that stands for terror,
massacre of civilians and permanent war against Jews,
Christians and non-Wahhabi Muslims."
Since the rise of Wahhabism in Saudi Arabia, some 300 years
ago, Sunni scholars have written hundreds of books and issued
thousands of fatwas declaring Wahhabism to be a heretical
cult, refuting its mistakes and exposing its deviances. And,
by virtue of his ijazzah, Palazzi believes it is not
only his right but also his duty to publicly refute this
heresy.
In this, he is not alone among Muslim scholars. What
distinguishes Palazzi is his views on Jews and the Land of
Israel.
Palazzi believes that Israel exists by "divine right" and
that the Koran clearly states (Sura 5:21) that God granted the
Land of Israel to the Children of Israel and ordered them to
settle there. In addition, it is predicted that before the end
of days, God will bring the Children of Israel to retake
possession of the Land, gathering them from the different
countries and nations (Sura 17:104).
Oddly enough, Palazzi's reading of the Koran is backed up
by, of all sources, Al Qaida.
The Al Qaida website recently carried an article entitled,
"The Jews Are Unworthy of the Promised Land. As translated by
DEBKAfile.com, the article reads, "Allah decided to test the
Jews when they were still an oppressed people [while in
Egypt]. He seeks to lead them to the path of faith and victory
and therefore urges them to conquer the Land of Israel. They
[the Jews] are even more afraid to fight for the Promised Land
than they are of God. For this reason, the Jewish People does
not find it hard to break the covenant between God and Abram
which awarded the Land of Israel to the Jewish People for all
generations."
But while Al Qaida comes to the conclusion that the Jewish
People has not lived up to its end of the bargain and
therefore the covenant is abrogated, giving Muslims the right
to the Land, Palazzi believes that the covenant is still very
much in force.
"In 1919, when the Hashemite Emir Feisal first heard of
Zionism, he exclaimed that he was seeing what was announced in
the Koran - the Jews coming back to the land." Palazzi points
out. "And this was one of the reasons he signed his historic
agreement with Chaim Weizmann."
He blames the British for fomenting discord between Muslims
and Jews and maintaining a "divide and conquer policy."
According to Palazzi, until two decades
ago, Arab opposition to the State of Israel was based on
nationalism, not Islam. "The propaganda in Nasser's Egypt
was based on Israel as a denial of Arab nationalism and the
unity of the Arab world," he explains. "There was no idea of
a revolutionary party based on Islam. Islam was considered a
religion not related to politics." This changed with the
collapse of Nasserism, the rise of oil-rich Saudi Arabia and
the Iranian revolution.
"When Arab nationalism was destroyed, this left a void,
which was filled by Saudi Arabia and Wahhabism," he
continues. "Because Israel borders on the Arab countries and
is in the center of the Middle East, it is a more direct
threat to Arab regimes. They are afraid that if there were
normal relations between their countries and Israel, their
citizens would be able to compare between the democracy and
advanced society in Israel and their own backwardness."
As for Jerusalem, although not mentioned by name in the
Koran, Palazzi cites Islamic sources to prove that the city
is the site of Solomon's Holy Temple.
"Today, official Palestinian Authority propaganda denies any
connection of the Jews to Jerusalem," Palazzi says. "In
doing so, they are not only revising history but also
classical Islamic sources. The Koran presents the same
history as the Bible. This was clear to Muslim scholars for
centuries - Al Aksa and Solomon's Temple are in the same
place. When the Caliph Omar first arrived in Jerusalem, he
called the city Bayet Al Makdis - Beit Hamikdash or the
House of the Temple. This was shortened to Al Quds."
While in Israel, Palazzi also took the time to travel to
Hebron to visit the Jewish community. "I am particularly
sensitive to Hebron," he claims. "This is a place that
clearly reflects historical discrimination against Jews. If
there is one place about which no one can question the right
of Jews to live - even more so than Jerusalem - it is
Hebron. To suggest that Jews should not live in Hebron is
defiling Jewish heritage. Yet the world seems to ignore this."
He continues, "Every political power seems to be interested
in making Hebron free of a Jewish presence, as well as
various Israeli governments. I am afraid that after Gaza,
Hebron will be next. I went to visit the Jewish community to
tell them that they are living in the land where Jews have
more right to be than anywhere else."
Palazzi was born in Rome to a non-observant Muslim family of
Syrian origin who had been living in Italy for more than a
century. He had no special interest in religion when he was
growing up, but he was interested in spirituality and
metaphysics. This led him to study philosophy at the State
University of Rome.
During this period, he became interested in Islam. Upon
graduation, he went to Cairo to study. "There I studied
under Sheikh Muhammed al-Mutawali as-Sharawi, one of the
most outstanding Islamic leaders. He felt it was necessary
for the Muslim world...to return to the days of Andalusia
[the Golden Age of Spain] when we had good relations with
the Jews. Sharawi was the one who convinced Sadat to open
relations with Israel."
Returning to Rome in 1984 after four years in Cairo, Palazzi
found a changing Muslim community. Whereas most Muslims were
once from Somalia and Afghanistan, the community had begun
to experience mass immigration from the Middle East.
"The extremists starting arriving and began to try to take
control of the community," he relates. "That is when I
started to distinguish my position from theirs. I took a
clear stand on the Middle East - that there is no problem
with the existence of Israel - and on developing good
relations with the Jewish community."
Palazzi feels that the level of propaganda under the
repressive Arab regimes is so massive that people are not
free to learn the truth. "The main role of Muslims in free
countries is to speak out," he proclaims. "We have to
convince the world of the nature of the threat of Wahhabism
before it is too late."
Palazzi's lecture on Wahhabi terrorism was sponsored by the
Root and Branch Association, a small non-profit group that
claims to promote cooperation between "B'nai Israel (Children
of Israel) and B'nai Noach (Children of Noah) in Israel and
abroad" and supports a largely right-wing and religious
program.
Palazzi is co-chair of Root and Branch's Islam-Israel
Fellowship, which "promotes cooperation between Jews and
Muslims both within the State of Israel and abroad, and
between the State of Israel and Muslim nations, based upon a
correct Jewish understanding of the Bible and Jewish
tradition, and a correct Muslim understanding of the Qur'an
and Islamic tradition."
Palazzi made light of the risks inherent in making his
opinions public, although on other occasions he has cited
the names of Muslims leaders killed for proclaiming similar
ideas.
"My task is to help Muslims understand that Muslim
fundamentalism contradicts the principles of our religion,"
he has written. "Doing so is not a theological game and
risks lives."
"Palazzi has been speaking out for years," notes Raphael
Israeli, a professor at the Hebrew University's Truman
Institute and Department of Middle East and Islamic Studies.
"He is a lonely voice who is shunned by orthodox Islam.
There are things written in the Koran as he cites them but
then there are also contradictory things written. It all
depends on where you put the emphasis."
Says Israeli, "Not many Muslims are paying attention to him.
Islamic fundamentalism is the winning direction. Maybe there
are other Muslim intellectuals who think like him, but they
are not heard. Maybe they are afraid to speak. If he lived
in an Islamic country, he would have been killed long ago.
But he is in the West, so he can speak."
Adds Prof. Moshe Sharon, also of the Hebrew University's
Department of Middle East and Islamic Studies as well as the
Institute of Asian and African Studies, "Palazzi is talking
about the true Islam, based on his understanding of the
Koranic texts. What others use for fanaticism and war, he is
saying can be read to show peaceful coexistence and the
rights of the Jews to Israel... If you interpret the text
correctly, you will find the positive. What he is doing is a
wonderful thing."