Beginning in 1919, al-Husseini began organizing jihad attacks against
Jews, as well as riots in Jerusalem in 1920 during which six Jews were
killed and two hundred injured. The following year, British high
commissioner Herbert Samuel responded to al-Husseini’s instigation of
jihad violence by appointing him mufti of Jerusalem, hoping that this
gift would lead al-Husseini to be “devoted to tranquility.”
Instead, al-Husseini continued to incite violence, including riots in Petach Tikvah and Jaffa just weeks after he became mufti; forty-three Jews were killed. A British government report stated that “the Arab
majority, who were generally the aggressors, inflicted most of the
casualties.”
This continued to be true as Muslim Arabs attacked Jews over the next
two decades, largely at al-Husseini’s instigation. Instead of
confronting its mufti, in May 1939 the British government limited Jewish
settlement in Palestine to seventy-five thousand over the next five
years, thereby rewarding jihad violence by giving the mufti part of what
he wanted (if it had been up to him, Jewish entry into the Holy Land
would have been halted entirely, and the Jews there expelled) and
condemning to death in the Holocaust untold numbers of Jews who might
have escaped.
From 1941 to 1945, al-Husseini lived in Berlin, where he became close
friends with Adolf Eichmann and Heinrich Himmler, and met with Adolf
Hitler. Eichmann’s assistant, Dieter Wisliczeny, testified at the
Nuremberg Trials that the mufti had been a central figure in the
planning of the genocide of the Jews:
The Grand Mufti has repeatedly suggested to the Nazi
authorities—including Hitler, von Ribbentrop and Himmler—the
extermination of European Jewry. He considered this a comfortable
solution to the Palestine problem….The Mufti was one of the initiators
of the systematic extermination of European Jewry and had been a
collaborator and adviser of Eichmann and Himmler in the execution of
this plan. He was one of Eichmann’s best friends and had constantly
incited him to accelerate the extermination measures. I heard him say,
accompanied by Eichmann, he had visited incognito the gas chambers of
Auschwitz.
Eichmann denied this, but in any case, there is no doubt of the fact
that the mufti was openly calling for the mass murder of Jews. In a
broadcast on July 7, 1942, the mufti exhorted Muslims in Egypt, Syria,
Iraq, and Palestine to kill Jews, basing his exhortation on a flagrant
lie:
A large number of Jews residing in Egypt and a number of
Poles, Greeks, Armenians and Free French, have been issued with
revolvers and ammunition in order to help them against the Egyptians at
the last moment, when Britain is forced to evacuate Egypt….
You must kill the Jews, before they open fire on you. Kill the Jews,
who have appropriated your wealth and who are plotting against your
security. Arabs of Syria, Iraq and Palestine, what are you waiting for?
The Jews are planning to violate your women, to kill your children and
to destroy you. According to the Muslim religion, the defense of your
life is a duty which can only be fulfilled by annihilating the Jews.
This is your best opportunity to get rid of this dirty race, which has
usurped your rights and brought misfortune and destruction on your
countries. Kill the Jews, burn their property, destroy their stores,
annihilate these base supporters of British imperialism. Your sole hope
of salvation lies in annihilating the Jews before they annihilate you.
Al-Husseini also actively intervened on numerous occasions to ensure
that Jews were not deported from Europe—thereby ensuring that
extermination was the only option left for the fanatical Nazi
Jew-haters. As late as July 25, 1944, al-Husseini wrote to Joachim von
Ribbentrop, the German minister for foreign affairs:
I have previously called the attention of your Excellency
to the constant attempts of the Jews to emigrate from Europe in order
to reach Palestine and asked your Excellency to undertake the necessary
steps so as to prevent the Jews from emigrating. I had also sent you a
letter, under date of June 5, 1944, in regard to the plan for an
exchange of Egyptians living in Germany with Palestinian Germans, in
which I asked you to exclude the Jews from this plan of exchange. I
have, however, learned that the Jews did depart on July 2, 1944, and I
am afraid that further groups of Jews will leave for Palestine from
Germany and France to be exchanged for Palestinian Germans….It is for
this reason that I ask your Excellency to do all that is necessary to
prohibit the emigration of Jews to Palestine, and in this way your
Excellency would give a new practical example of the policy of the
naturally allied and friendly Germany towards the Arab Nation.
Al-Husseini was a committed collaborator with the Nazis, traveling
from Berlin to Bosnia in 1943 to raise up a Muslim SS company, which was
responsible for killing ninety percent of the Jews in Bosnia, as well
as for the burning of numerous Serbian churches. He noted the
convergence of the goals of Islamic jihad and those of the Nazis. “It is
the duty of Muhammadans in general and Arabs in particular to…drive all
Jews from Arab and Muhammadan countries…. Germany is also struggling
against the common foe who oppressed Arabs and Muhammadans in their
different countries. It has very clearly recognized the Jews for what
they are and resolved to find a definitive solution [endgültige Lösung] for the Jewish danger that will eliminate the scourge that Jews represent in the world.”
In a 1944 broadcast, he made that “definitive solution” explicit:
“Kill the Jews wherever you find them. This pleases God, history, and
religion.” His call was an echo of the Qur’an’s call to “kill them
wherever you find them” (2:191, 4:89) and to “kill the idolaters
wherever you find them.” (9:5)
Al-Husseini was arrested by French troops in May 1945, but the French
refused requests from the British to turn him over to their custody.
The British may have wanted to put him on trial, as he was a British
citizen (of their Palestinian mandate) and a collaborator with the
Nazis. Instead, the French put him on a plane to Cairo, where he resumed
his jihad against the Jews. The Muslim Brotherhood successfully
prevailed upon the Egyptian government to grant him asylum. He died
peacefully in 1974.
“Photographic Evidence Shows Palestinian Leader Amin al-Husseini at a Nazi Concentration Camp,” by Wolfgang G. Schwanitz, Tablet, April 7, 2021: