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The Nuclear Card

Moroccan King’s Adviser Promotes Muslim-Jewish Amity

Posted on 18 June 2012 by Emperor

Building bridges between faith communities in Morocco. (h/t: Amir)

Moroccan king’s adviser promotes Arab-Jewish amity

by Sheldon Kirshner (CJNews)

TORONTO — Andre Azoulay is a bridge builder par excellence.

For years now, he has devoted himself to building coexistence and understanding between the Arab world and Diaspora Jewish communities and fostering dialogue between Islam and western societies.

“It is my mission in life,” he said in an interview last week.

Azoulay, a Moroccan Jew, is a senior adviser to King Mohammed VI of Morocco, a pro-western North African Muslim country that has worked for Arab-Israeli reconciliation and peace.

Azoulay was here as a guest of the newly formed Communaute Juive Marocaine de Toronto, an organization that promotes Moroccan Jewish culture and history. Headed by Simon Keslassy, the CJMT was the sponsor of “2,000 Years of Jewish Life in Morocco,” a recent eight-day celebration of the Jewish experience there.

The event, mainly sponsored by UJA Federation of Greater Toronto, the Canadian Sephardic Federation and the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies, coincided with the 50th anniversary of Canada-Morocco diplomatic relations.

Azoulay, who was born in the Moroccan town of Essaouira-Mogador in 1941, studied economics, journalism and international relations in Paris. From 1968 to 1990, he was employed by the Paribas Bank in Paris in an executive position.

During the last eight years of the reign of King Hassan II of Morocco, Azoulay was one of his advisers.

With his death in 1999, his successor, Mohammed VI – who has called the Holocaust “one of the most tragic chapters of modern history” –reappointed Azoulay, who advises the royal court on economic affairs and plays a role in encouraging foreign investment in Morocco.

By his own reckoning, he is the king’s sole Jewish adviser, and the only Jew in the Arab world who fulfils such a function.

Azoulay is president of the executive committee of the Foundation of Three Cultures and Three Religions, based in Seville, and one of the founders of the Aladdin Project, with headquarters in Paris.

He is also president of the Anna Lindh Euro-Mediterranean Foundation and a member of the Alliance of Civilizations, a United Nations body created at the suggestion of Spain and Turkey.

Asked what these organizations have achieved, Azoulay would only say that time will tell. As he put it, “It’s a long process, not an easy one, a long way. It needs time, commitment and loyalty.”

He rejected the idea that the Islamic world and the West are on a collision course in a clash of civilizations.

“It’s a theory we have to resist,” he said in French-accented English, noting that religion and politics should not be conflated.

There is, however, a “clash of ignorance.” He said, “We know a lot about western civilization in the Arab world. But what do westerners know about my [Arab] traditions? We have to fill this gap with education.”

In a reference to the Arab world’s golden era centuries ago, he observed, “My region was exporting mathematics and poetry when westerners were breaking stones.”

Decrying the stigmatization of Islam, Azoulay said that Islamophobia and antisemitism are cut from the same cloth of racism. “To resist antisemitism, you have to fight Islamophobia.”

When asked what accounts for Islamophobia, he replied, “I don’t know. We need pages and books to explain this phenomenon. Globally, we’ve regressed. This issue didn’t exist 30 or 40 years ago.”

  • Géji

    The one thing I believe Mr Andre Azoulay should be ‘advising’ the ‘king’ is to step down from the throne at once and let democracy flourish in his country. And I think that all Arab Jews (abroad or at home) should be promoting the same in their countries, and advise their fellow countrymen to get rid of dictators. Its good to promote religious tolerance, but the ultimate goal should be a just equality for all under the law, whatever their race, religion, ethnic for their countries. I hope the Arab Jews are pushing for that in their countries.

  • Steve

    Oh ok, so i disagree with a clearly incorrect assertion and that’s a sign of “veiled islamophobia” is it?

    I do favour western civilisation, I am from it and of it. Presumably those who aren’t favour their civilisations too. That’s just how it works.

    I have never said the west was always the dominant force.

    I have never said western europe wasn’t lagging behind other areas in some facets during the so called dark ages, I merely disagreed with the clearly incorrect statement from the chap in the article.

    Western Europe adopted some influences from the islamic world, just as the islamic world adopted some influences from the christian west. Cross cultural pollination has always happened, I don’t see anybody denying it.

    Some adopted the trappings of the east just as some in the east adopted the trapping of the west, see above.

    I really wish people would read my posts correctly rather than making things up about what I write then getting upset by them, it would be a lot easier all round and I wouldn’t have to waste time responding to oddballs.

  • Zakariya Ali Sher

    Veiled Islamophobia. Typical of what we’ve seen from Steve so far. He’s yet another so-called Atheist who favors ‘western’ civilization above all else. It must be painful to admit that the ‘west’ was NOT always the dominant world force, nor is it likely that it will stay that way for much longer either. The last two hundred years have been something of a fluke. India and China – with a huge portion of the world’s population – will likely lead the future, along with other developing countries.

    Yes, Europe was not as backwards during the ‘Dark Ages’ as some would have us think. Yes, it DID produce great literature, like Beowulf, Arnaut Danièl and Hildegard of Bingen. Yes, they did have science. But the fact is that they were lagging behind the Islamic world, China, India and the Christian East. The fact is that Europeans themselves were somewhat aware of this, and did adopt the culture, science and ideas of the Islamic world and the East as best they could. They weren’t consciously trying to cut themselves off from the rest of the world; no, far from it, they wanted to adopt the trappings of the East. Just something for Steve to think about.

  • Steve

    Sorry, I am not replying to myself above, it should read @Sir David

  • Steve

    @Steve, left leaning papers are generally quite keen to “accept tyranny, the subservience of women, social and ethnic hatred” as long as it’s elsewhere.

  • Sir David : Man on a phone with a french spell check

    Steve
    I live in France the left leaning papers saw it my way too :-)
    As for the statement above you will note I disagreed with it too.

  • Steve

    @Sir David,

    That’s the francophobe interpretation but it’s not what he he meant. It is interesting that his comment was received so poorly on here yet the comment of the bloke in the above article hasn’t (other than by me)

  • Sir David : Man on a phone with a french spell check

    Steve
    What the French minister said has to be taken in context and history
    Those who defend liberty equality and freternity = the French uniquely
    Those who are under tyranny = everyone else

    Sir David
    Vice chair
    Leftwing mooslim alliance
    West Anjou Branch
    France

  • Steve

    Sir David, I don’t see those asserting that islamic art had an influence on the book of kells, the influence was from earlier traditions of art which also influenced islamic art.

    “As for Celts , the problem here is celts as in prehistory and early roman times are not automatically the same peoples as later inhabited the outer reaches of Ireland Scotland and wales”

    Well, there was no celtic invasion as was once thought, the people are pretty much the same with occasional additions but there was no wholesale replacement of people.

    The French minister said: “Those which defend liberty, equality and fraternity, seem to us superior to those who accept tyranny, the subservience of women, social and ethnic hatred”

    I don’t see how anybody could argue with that, he isn’t saying that his culture produced science and poetry while another was merely breaking rocks – as the guy in the above article is ridiculously claiming.

    @rookie, I have never denied that muslim scientists, poets and philosophers have had a great impact in many areas of science and the arts. I do wish people would read what I write rather than making things up then getting upset by them.

  • Sir David Illuminati membership number 16.69

    Firstly I dont deny that Islamic art and science had a powerful influence on europe far from it .
    I watched an interesting documentry many years ago whilst in Eire suggesting early influences on Irish art and music from North Africa unfortunetly I cannot recall the name of it .

    A simple search brought this up .
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interlace_(art)
    and this
    http://www.wclibrary.info/kells/

    So its not a new idea in art history.

    As for Celts , the problem here is celts as in prehistory and early roman times are not automatically the same peoples as later inhabited the outer reaches of Ireland Scotland and wales
    As for the Coptic church remember that the church of Aiden, Patrick and Columba was a long way from Rome never mind the Coptic or Byzantine Churches.
    The point I am making is that the dark ages may not have been as dark as supposed . Just because we dont know much about them .
    As for the french minister he’s just a prat.

  • Sir David Illuminati membership number 16.69

    Firstly I dont deny that Islamic art and science had a powerful influence on europe far from it .
    I watched an interesting documentry many years ago whilst in Eire suggesting early influences on Irish art and music from North Africa unfortunetly I cannot recall the name of it .

    A simple search brought this up .
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interlace_(art)
    and this
    http://www.wclibrary.info/kells/

    So its not a new idea in art history.

    As for Celts , the problem here is celts as in prehistory and early roman times are not automa the same peoples

  • Steve

    Rookie, I have never suggested that texts written by muslims weren’t used in Europe (and vice versa)

    I was merely pointing out that the claim “My region was exporting mathematics and poetry when westerners were breaking stones” is utter nonsense.

    I do find it interesting to compare the reaction on here to that comment with the reaction to the french government minister’s comment about differing cultures – and the comment on this article has far more of a supremacist nature.

    Sir David, I would have thought earlier byzantine and coptic illuminated texts would have influenced islamic art. Certainly much bronze and iron age metal work has patterns which are later found in celtic texts.

    Can you point me in the direction of some articles saying the book of kells had islamic influences?

  • rookie

    Si David,

    I am not denying that.

    Islamophobes deny every bit of scientific achievement that occurred in the muslim part of the world.

    Steve is the part of that world.

  • Sir David Illuminati membership number 16.69

    Rookie
    Everyone both in Europe and in the Middle east studied Pythagerous and Eucid , in fact they still do !
    er so your point is ? ;-)

  • Sir David Illuminati membership number 16.69

    Steve et al
    I find it intersting that people still see the european so called dark ages as a period of ignorance when it is in many ways our ignorance of what was a relativly tranquil time time for many.
    The book of Kells for instance has been suggested to have Islamic and preIslamic north african artistic influences . Both Berber and Adalucian merchants traded with the British Isles at this time. Sea trade being easier by far than land transport.
    When you look at the Norman conquest of England with its introduction of a centralised beucracy ( see the Doomsday book) and Nobility with its castles to opress the poor as opposed to the more egaliterian and decentralised Saxon Kingdom much more information about what is going on becomes available. Having more information does not mean that it was a more enlightened era just we know more about it .
    Any way back to the trolls

  • rookie

    Stevie,

    although Wikipedia is not my favorite source, I believe you should read something else-appart from islamophobic texts.

    “Up to the year 1650, or thereabouts, the Canon was still used as a textbook in the universities of Leuven and Montpellier.”

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avicenna

    Steve, can you imagine that?
    Universities in Europe used books written by a muslim some 600 years after his death?!

    600 years!!!

    Well, that is a backwardness!!!

  • Steve

    “Yes Steve, westerners were breaking stones at that time, it is a fact”

    Yet these stone breakers under Charles Martel managed to turn back an army of muslims – did they throw stones at them?

    The fact is that great works of poetry and art were being produced in western europe at the time. Look up the Book of Kells, that wasn’t produced by stone breakers.

    When muslims invaded Rome in 846 and plundered the great basilicas do you think they were looking for broken stones?

  • rookie

    As I came to this sentence:

    “In a reference to the Arab world’s golden era centuries ago, he observed, “My region was exporting mathematics and poetry when westerners were breaking stones.”

    my first thought was, OMG, what are the islamophobes are now trying to do – hearing this from the mouth of a jew.

    And I was right.
    Just in the second comment Stevie Wonders and denies.

    Yes Steve, westerners were breaking stones at that time, it is a fact.

    But, you know, you keep rewritting history and keep correcting it.
    Just to have a good sleep and avoid nightmares.

    :) )))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))999.

    Loonwatch, sorry I`m wasting your virtual space, but I have to laugh.

    :) )))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))).

    Laughing is healthy.

    :) )))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))).

    Uh, enough.

  • Christian-friend

    A Jewish advisor of a Muslim king? Wow, Pam and Spencer are going to have a hard time spinning this to their favor.

    Be as it may, the king needs also a Christian advisor so nobody is left out.

  • Steve

    The article is fine, his notion of post roman europe is faulty

  • Nilufer R. Sage

    How about… instead of looking at the nonsense, look at the beauty of the article…

  • mindy1

    I wish him luck in this-there is NO reason Jews and Muslim should hate each other-we have too much in common. :D

  • Steve

    “My region was exporting mathematics and poetry when westerners were breaking stones.”

    nonsense

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