Ladies and Gentlemen:  
   
Please read Hagai Mazuz's scholarly and  candid essay below, and having done so, ask yourselves this question:  Since  Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is surely cognizant of the basic ideas  contained in this essay, hence, of the Arab's millennial hatred of the Jews,  what should one think of the intellectual integrity and moral character of this  prime minister, who is so pleased, if not proud, to be meeting with Mahmoud Abbas in  Washington, DC, there to negotiate with this Arab leader on matters affecting  Israel's security and survival?  
   
Prof. Paul Eidelberg,  President  
Foundation for Constitutional  Democracy  
Jerusalem
The Root of the Arab-Israeli Conflict: The  Classic Islamic View of Jews, Part II
 September 1, 2010 at 5:30  am
http://www.hudson-ny.org/1507/classic-islamic-view-of-jews-ii   
In showing that the Arab-Israeli  conflict is religious -- and not territorial -- based on texts from the  book Kitāb al-Maghāzī ["The Book of Holy Raids"], which documents how the Muslim  raids against the Jews in Medina and Khaybar in ancient Arabia were the source  of inspiration for the Islamic terrorist organizations, questions arose as to  whether we can generalize about Islam by examining just one  book.  Kitāb al-Maghāzī, however, is just one of  the many religious Islamic source books which contains anti-Jewish material. The  most well known Muslim book is the Quran, which  itself is filled with vehemently anti-Jewish material. Muslim sources explain  that the Quran is a collection of revelations that Allah gave to Muhammad  through the Angel Gabriel.  When Muhammad encountered difficulties, Allah told him how to solve these  problems via revelations; Uthman, the 3rd Caliph, collected all of them, and  that is how the Quran was created.
 The Quran is filled with a large amount of  material regarding the Jews, most of which labels them as cold-hearted and evil.  From this we learn that Muhammad had a lot of dealings with Jews, as Allah  "provided" Muhammed with many verses which deal with them. There are also many  verses which deal with biblical stories and the history of the Children of Israel  (called Isrā'īlīyāt).
 There is also a type of Islamic literature  called "The Circumstances of Revelation" (in Arabic: Asbāb al-Nuzūl), that  details the circumstances in which Allah revealed each and every verse in the  Quran to Muhammad. It is clear from this literature that even in many of the  verses in which the Jews and Christians are not mentioned, the Quranic scholars,  in their explanation of these verses, tell us that this or that verse was  "revealed" because of something the Jews or Christians did.
 In the opening chapter of the Quran, for  example, in verse 7, we find: "The path which You have blessed (i.e., the  Muslims; not those for whom Allah has felt wrath (in Arabic: al-Magh ḍūb  'alayhim)) and those who went astray (in Arabic: al-Ḍālin)." The Quranic  commentators explain the former as the Jews, and the latter as the Christians.  Further, whereas Muslim commentators often give several explanations for many  verses, in this case, every commentator agrees with this interpretation.  Muhammad uses this imagery to describe the Jews in other places in the Quran as  well (Quran: 2:159, 6:64, 58:14). This, according to Muhammad, is because the  Jews perverted God's words by altering their meanings (Quran: 2:75, 2:79, 3:87,  4:64. 5:13), and hid the true copy of the Torah (Quran:  2:76, 2:140, 2:159, 2:174, 4:37). According to the Muslim understanding, Jews  fabricated many of their laws and customs that were not in the original Torah  that God gave them, so it follows that believers should not follow the ways of  the Jews.
 The Jews became the source of all evil in  Muhammad's eyes; and according to Islamic tradition, Allah revealed to Muhammad  many verses which condemn the Jews and blame them for a large number of sins,  notably religious skeptics (Quran: 5:64); "murderers of prophets" (Quran: 2:91,  3:112, 3:181, 3:183); deceivers; and interest- and bribe-takers (Quran 4:161,  5:42). The Quran also claims that Jews have no equal in their hatred of Muslims  (5:82).
 Besides the Quran and the Kitāb al-maghāzī,  there is also the Hadith [prophetic  traditions], which describes Muhammad's customs and sayings. The Hadith, filling  the void of what is missing in the Quran, is also known in Arabic as the Sunna, from which  we get the word Sunnis -- those who followed Muhammad's example. Muhammad, for  them, is the ideal Muslim whom Sunnis strive to imitate in every way  possible.
 Together, the Quran and the Hadith form the  basis of the Shari'a – Islamic Holy Law. Apart from what is written in the  Quran, Hadith literature goes into even greater detail than the Quran does about  how and why the Jews are the greatest enemies and haters of  Islam.
 One Hadith blames the Jews for delaying the  redemption of mankind, and explains why the Jews therefore should be killed: "As  is it written: the hour (of Judgment Day) shall not arrive until the Muslims  fight and kill the Jews. Who are hiding behind stones and trees; and (then) the  stones are trees will say: 'Oh Muslim, be the servant of Allah, there is a Jews  hiding (behind me). Come and kill him.'" Incidentally, this Hadith appears in  Paragraph #7 of the Hamas Charter, and is often cited in mosque sermons and in  Muslim theological conferences, most notably in Cairo's al-Azhar  University, the most important Sunni seminary in the Sunni Muslim  world.
 Beyond Muhammad's raids on the Jews of  Medina and Khaybar listed in the Kitāb al-Maghāzī, there are many other stories  about how Muhammad and his followers dealt with non-Jews. Muhammed and his  followers raided many other Arab tribes in the Hijaz, and made  the Christian community of Najran (in southern Arabia north of Yemen) into dhmmis  (protected people, though discriminated-against). There are also detailed  descriptions about how many of Muhammad's followers sacrificed their souls for  Allah in the battles against the infidels (a process called istishhād, which  comes from the same Arabic root for the word shahīd [martyr], and about how the  Muslim warriors shouted "Allahu Akbar"  [Allah is the most great] as the swords of the infidels went straight through  their bodies on their way to the 72 virgins awaiting them in the special chamber  of heroes in Paradise.
 The "dhimmitude" mentioned above became the  model for the status of the non-Muslims in the Islamic State, who were  thereafter to be regarding as inferior and second-class citizens because not  members of the "true faith" Besides that, these dhimmis were forced to obey the  rules of what later became known as the "Pact of 'Umar"  (known as Shurūṭ 'Umar), which require them to wear specific garments to  distinguish them from the Muslims (the Jews were obliged to wear a yellow star, from  which the Nazis took their yellow star), not to build a place of worship higher  than Muslim mosques; not to ride on saddled horses; to pay a special tax; to  give way to Muslims on the street, and to follow various other laws which  humiliate and point out their secondary status in relationship to the  Muslims.
 There are other important Islamic source  books as well; for example, the biography of Muhammad (called the Sīra) which  includes a summary of the stories that are mentioned in the Kitāb al-maghāzī.  All of these books are the basis of the Sunna.
 After Muhammad's death, the Muslims rode out  of Arabia and conquered a vast area extending from Spain to the borders of  China: in 100 years, they went from being a small community to an imperial  conqueror. The wars fought to capture this huge territory are described in  minute detail in a book called "The Islamic Conquest of the Lands" (in Arabic:  Futūḥ al-Buldān).
 According to Muslim tradition, every land  conquered by the Muslims becomes holy (called waqf) and must remain in  perpetuity under Muslim control. If, however, some of these lands are taken back  by the infidels, Muslims must do everything in their power to re-capture them.  Today, there are two countries which fit this category: Spain and Israel.
 The hostility Muhammad felt towards the  Jews, Christians and other non-Muslims continued to be a major topic in medieval  Islamic religious literature. This meant that the early hostility Islam felt  towards the non-Muslims continued to plague the non-Muslims. Medieval works  antithetical to the Jews and other non-Muslims include the descriptions of such  Muslim theologians and scholars such as the often-quoted al-Jāḥiz (781-868);  Ibn Taymiyya (1260-1327), the intellectual godfather of the Wahhabis of the  Arabian Peninsula; and Ibn Hazm (994-1064), who raved against the Torah and the  Talmud.
 There is, therefore, a whole collection of  early and medieval Muslim works which lambast and denigrate Jews, Christians,  and a myriad of other non-Muslim peoples – works which are still quoted widely  throughout the Muslim world. The  heroes of these books are virtually as alive today in the heart and minds of the  Islamic fundamentalists and terrorists as they were at the time that they were  written -- which does not bode well for the future of Muslim/non-Muslim  relations: what appears to us in the West to be territorial conflicts are, in  fact, religious conflicts, which, sadly, do not lend themselves to simple  solutions.