Could peace between the Jewish State and a Sunni Arab powerhouse portend increasing religious freedom across the Middle East?
By Lela Gilbert, World Israel News
On August 13, World Israel News reported that the United Arab Emirates and Israel have agreed to establish full diplomatic ties as part of a deal to halt Israel’s extension of sovereignty over Judea and Samaria. The announcement makes the UAE the first Gulf Arab state to do so and only the third Arab nation to have active diplomatic ties to Israel.”
The announcement was made by President Donald Trump.
“Now that the ice has been broken I expect more Arab and Muslim countries will follow the United Arab Emirates.”
So President Trump, who negotiated the agreement, predicted.
There was, of course, debate in Israel and beyond about whether the agreement had cast aside annexation of biblical Judea and Samaria for the sake of an elusive peace gesture. At the same time, there was celebration among young Israelis, embracing new hopes for harmony with the Arab world.
Despite the UAE flag emblazoned in lights across Tel Aviv’s city hall, heated discussions on the subject continue between American and Israeli, religious and secular, conservative and liberal Jews and their supporters.
‘Sarsour has no role in the campaign whatsoever,’
Biden spokesman says after DNC address
For several years, the United Arab Emirates has been painting a self-portrait not only of a super-wealthy Arab state, but also as a haven of religious freedom. And since Pope Francis’ dramatic visit there in February 2019, much has been said to affirm that these efforts amount to more than a photo-op.
Deutche Welle (DW) described the Pope’s visit as an historic milestone, reporting
“More than 130,000 worshipers flocked to the Zayed Sports City Stadium in the UAE capital, Abu Dhabi, on Tuesday to celebrate a Mass with Pope Francis… He is the first leader of the Catholic Church ever to set foot on the Arabian Peninsula, the birthplace of Islam.”
If peace between Jews, Muslims and Christians is possible in one small Arab country, why couldn’t it extend further? Reflecting on this possibility, prayerful optimists have lifted their eyes heavenward while world-weary cynics continue to shake their heads.
On the optimistic side, DW explained that at the start of his papal visit, Pope Francis met with Crown Prince Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and other UAE leaders at the presidential palace.
“He also signed a document promoting ‘human fraternity’ with Sheikh Ahmed el-Tayeb, the grand imam of Egypt’s Al-Azhar, the seat of Sunni Muslim learning. During an address to a gathering of interfaith leaders, he called for an end to wars in the Middle East, including in Yemen and Syria. All religious leaders had a ‘duty to reject every nuance of approval from the word war,’ he said.”
But, as less-than-upbeat observers will quickly note, religious freedom in the Middle East often ends where radical Islam begins, whether that dangerous version of ideology is rooted in Shiite or Sunni tradition. In fact, in its 2020 Country Report, the U.S. Commission on Religious Freedom (USCIRF) declared that Egypt, Iraq and Turkey were included on its “Special Watch List,” while Iran and Saudi Arabia continue to be “Countries of Particular Concern” (CPC).
Both had either permitted or committed egregious violations of religious freedom. Indeed, the violent nature of conflicts in the Middle East, including genocides of Christians, Yazidis and other minorities, tend to discourage even the most enthusiastic proponents of dialogue and reconciliation.
Still, efforts for peace – whether motivated by economic promise or intended to create a bulwark against Iranian and Turkish aggression – should not be disregarded. It is a region where churches are sometimes bombed or torched and surviving synagogues are broken relics of happier days — before the wholesale expulsion of entire Jewish communities.
Nonetheless, the UAE has begun a unique project intended to transform the marred image of Muslim, Jewish and Christian relations: a Multi-Faith Complex – including the first official synagogue in the country’s history.
“A church, mosque and synagogue will share a collective space for the first time, serving as a community for inter-religious dialogue and exchange, and nurturing the values of peaceful co-existence and acceptance among different beliefs, nationalities and cultures,” the committee overseeing construction of the complex said in a statement.
For years, Israel and the United Arab Emirates have been holding clandestine meetings. Now their newly revealed projects include both economic and defense opportunities to which both have contributed expertise and funding. Today, the inclusion of other Arab states in such endeavors is already under discussion, including Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Sudan and more.
Sanguine regional conversations about peace and prosperity should never be silenced. Prayerful candles should always be lit by people of faith. Nevertheless, wary eyes keep their watch as Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan and Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei rage and rant about the Israeli-Emirati agreement’s betrayal of Islamic empire-building.
And while Abu-Dhabi’s construction of the Multi-Faith Complex prepares for its 2022 opening, deadly gunfire shatters quiet nights in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, while rockets and explosive balloons continue to darken the sunlit skies above Israel.
++
Related articles
- Yazidi, they who were created
- Yazidi children ‘left alone’ to deal with ISIL captivity trauma
- Six years on, Yazidis in Iraq demand justice for ISIL persecution
- Yazidi elderly exterminated, women & young girls gang-raped & young men captured & indoctrinated & who cares? …
- Children of the Camps
- JIAS Helps Yazidi Kids Rebuild Lives Through Education
- ISIL will find no safe haven
- 2014 Human Rights
- 2014 Religion
- 2016 review Human rights
- Palestinian Family in Cave Home Faces ‘Israeli’ Eviction
- The Israel-UAE deal won’t bring stability or peace while further sidelining the Palestinians
- Palestinians express anger at UAE following US-brokered accord with Israel
- For Palestinians, Israel-U. A.E. Deal Swaps One Nightmare for Another
- The UAE makes peace with Israel’s war on the Palestinians | Israeli–Palestinian conflict
- Weekly Report on Israeli Human Rights in Palestine (29 July – 12 August 2020)
- Iran, Turkey lash out at UAE over agreement with Israel
- Deal between Israel, UAE thwarts resolution for Middle East conflict, Palestinians say
- Palestinians say UAE deal hinders quest for Mideast peace
- a Surprise at sunrise – Israel has agreed to suspend West Bank annexation plans in exchange for the normalization of ties with the United Arab Emirates, according to a joint statement from Israel, the UAE and the US released by US President Donald Trump. UAE Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Zayad confirms in a tweet that Israel has agreed to suspend annexation plans, but says that the countries have only agreed to work toward the normalization of relations. The UAE and Israel also agreed to cooperation and setting a roadmap towards establishing a bilateral relationship.
- 8/14/20 AP: Palestinians say UAE deal hinders quest for Mideast peace
- Palestinians slam ‘traitor’ UAE for normalising ties with Israel
- How the Israel-UAE deal puts the bogus peace industry back in business
- Stand Down Jews – worldwide
- Indonesia’s Muslim clerics decry Israel-UAE deal – Indonesia’s top Muslim clerics on Wednesday denounced the recent normalization deal between the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Israel. Muhyiddin Junaidi, deputy chairman of the Indonesian Ulema Council, said UAE’s move was a betrayal of the Palestinian cause.
- The Dilemma of the Left – There is a contradiction on the left that should make some of them re-examine their positions. The peace camp is predominantly leftist (as if conservatives don’t want peace), and the left is predominantly pro-Palestinian. So that makes the peace camp predominantly pro-Palestinian.
- Israeli warplanes strike Gaza – Relentlessly bomb Gaza a week after the UAE deal
- Kushner says UAE-Israel deal a ‘historic win,’ Palestinian leadership at ‘all time low’
- What Normalizing Relations Could Mean for the Middle East
- Palestinians in Gaza rally against Israel-UAE deal
- Israeli settler leader feels “defrauded” by Netanyahu
- The UAE-Israel Agreement: Winners and Losers
- Palestine Palestinians protesters in the Gaza Strip rallied against the United States-brokered deal to normalise ties between Israel and the United Arab Emirates.
- Palestinians call for boycott of UAE in protest of normalization with Israel
- UAE connects first nuclear plant to national grid
- Donald Trump expects Saudi Arabia to join UAE-Israel deal
Pingback: Analysis: Will religious freedom flourish in post-treaty Middle East? — From guestwriters | paddypicasso
Islam has suspicions on western behaviors, and history is on their side on this, in times past, there was little or no rancor between different believers living side by side, things changed, when there were efforts to change the leaderships and increase tensions between people of the same faith, and that brought anxiety and upheaval, that’s the past. You don’t live in anger, you usually acquire it, maybe this first step, while hard to stomach for some, is a move to a general understanding, that God is the same to all, and is fair to all, same way Jesus described who a believer should be, a good Samaritan. Faith, creed or race didn’t matter, it was how compassionate you were that counted, amen. baby steps, build the trust
LikeLiked by 1 person
Pingback: After ten years of horror still no solution and peace for Syria | Marcus Ampe's Space
Pingback: Yemen: A country in crisis, what the world governments should practice and advocate to bring an end to the conflict – Some View on the World
Pingback: Americans need to end their indifference concerning the war in Yemen – Some View on the World
Pingback: The Century Foundation: Corruption Is Strangling Iraq – Some View on the World
Pingback: The forgotten Syria – Some View on the World
Pingback: The Strategist: Prospects for Israeli–Palestinian peace more remote than ever – Some View on the World