Since October 7, many Jews have felt isolated and have reported feeling as if they have no allies in the Muslim and Arab worlds. This is understandable. As Jews we are haunted by traumas of the past, but it’s important to remember that today there is no such thing as a monolithic Muslim or Arab world, any more than there is a monolithic Jewish one. Here are the thoughts of a few of the Muslims and Arabs who have been courageously speaking out against antisemitism and the October Hamas attack on Israel. These Moment interviews and excerpts from other media have been edited for length.
Zainab Khan, a clinical psychologist, painter and community activist, is the cofounder and chair of the Muslim American Leadership Alliance (MALA), which nurtures emerging community leaders and unites Americans of all backgrounds to advance constructive solutions to extremism and human rights abuses.
I was born in Chicago, Illinois. My mother was Indo-Pakistani, my father had fled Afghanistan, and I grew up celebrating the Fourth of July as the biggest holiday. I am proud of my Muslim-American heritage. I started the Muslim American Leadership Alliance (MALA) as a platform for Muslim Americans such as myself who aren’t tied down to any political or theological representation, but rather just to our own American journeys and human stories.
“Speaking out against antisemitism doesn’t signal support for bombing Gaza or for Israel’s policies, but rather is a sign of moral clarity.”
After October 7, I reached out to a plethora of our Muslim partners at U.S. museums, mosques and elsewhere to issue a statement of support with our Jewish brothers and sisters. That’s when it dawned on me that speaking out against antisemitism within the Muslim-American community is controversial.
The vicious, hateful rhetoric on social media, at rallies and protests, and the way Muslims are being represented in the media has drowned out the voices of Muslim Americans who do stand up against extremism and who stand together with Jewish community members. This compelled me to write an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal [“Muslim Americans Against Hamas: Equivocation and Antisemitism Serve Only to Feed Suspicion of our Community”]. Since then, I’ve had hundreds of conversations with Muslim Americans, including people of Palestinian heritage, who are saying, “We need to have a voice at the table.” And I see that there’s a large problem with institutional Muslim organizations—that’s where change needs to happen.
Speaking out against antisemitism doesn’t signal support for bombing Gaza or for Israel’s policies, but rather is a sign of moral clarity. And it’s not Islamophobic to stand up against extremism.
The Muslim-American community has been drilled to think that if you speak out, you’re falling into the trap of an Islamophobic narrative. But what are we doing to counter that narrative?
We need to ask: How are we addressing women’s issues? How are we addressing rape that’s used during war? How are we addressing extremist ideology and the dehumanizing of Jewish communities or anybody who’s connected to or has a sense of identity with Israel? At MALA, we’re planning a series of events amplifying the voices of Palestinian Americans who feel like their identity has been hijacked by far-left protests and hateful rhetoric that is not advocating for positive social change. Many of these protesters don’t understand history, they’re going by hashtags—what they’re able to post on Instagram. We need to help direct the energy of our youth into thinking, “Okay, how do we make the world a better place?”
We also need to ask: How is leadership addressing what’s acceptable, what’s crossing the line of hate and becoming inflammatory and dangerous? Change has to start with the conversations that we have with our colleagues and at the dinner table with our families.
—From an interview for MomentLive! by Nadine Epstein.
Mohammed Dajani is a Jerusalem-born Palestinian scholar and peace activist who in 2007 launched Wasatia, a movement dedicated to peace through education within the Palestinian community, including a more rational understanding of Islam and interfaith dialogue to promote coexistence. He lives in Jerusalem.
A Greek philosopher once said, “Truth is the first casualty of war.” And certainly in this war, each side has its own narrative. I think this was the goal of the extremists in starting it, to widen the gap between both peoples. And that’s basically what they have tried to do since the Oslo Accords. Shulamith Hareven, in her book The Vocabulary of Peace, writes that before Oslo, it was Palestinians against Israelis, while post-Oslo it’s been Palestinians and Israelis who were for peace against Palestinians and Israelis who were against peace.
People are also saying that religion is part of the problem. Instead, religion should be part of the solution, because if you study religion well, you see that all religions have many similar values, that we have nothing to fight over. In Islam, the problem is the extremists who misinterpret the Quranic scripture to be anti-Jewish, anti-Christian, anti-Other. But this is not the truth within the scripture. And that’s what we are doing in Wasatia as a movement, trying to bring awareness to people about what the Quran teaches and not what extremists say it teaches.
Basically my ideology is moderation to undermine the ideology of Hamas, to stand up and undermine the ideology of extremism. And so, I will keep promoting Holocaust education. I will keep promoting awareness of antisemitism and trying to bring peace in times of hardship and trying to light the candle in this darkness. The people who have died on both sides should not die in vain.
There are more than seven million Israeli Jews on one side, there are over five million Palestinians on the other side, and the only way is for each to swallow the bitter pill and know that their one state from river to sea is not going to happen. We must have two states from river to sea. And eventually, when there is trust, maybe the land can link together like when a wound to the body heals over time and binds together. But you have to address it with medicine. And the medicine here is reconciliation and living in coexistence.
—From a recent Moment interview by Jennifer Bardi.