Do you believe that Jews hate Islam?

Yes, Jews hate Islam
51% (115 votes)
No, Jews do not hate Islam
30% (68 votes)
I don't know
19% (44 votes)
Total votes: 227

Muslims often accuse the Jews of hating the religion of Islam.

Is that really true?

Please cast your vote on the poll either BEFORE reading
the following article, or, AFTER reading it.

Thanks you all.

CNN: Israeli Web site advises using wisdom of Quran

An Israeli professor and his students have launched a Web site to "promote" the teachings of the Quran.

Story Highlights:

Israeli professor and his Bedouin Arab students launch Web site Quranet.net

The site promotes the Quran by using its wisdom to address modern-day problems

"We try to transform the Quran into a modern and useful tool," professor said

Some Arab media have criticized Quranet for promoting an Israeli "agenda"

By Dana Rosenblatt - CNN, Friday 5 December 2008

A new Web site launched by an Israeli university professor and his Bedouin students aims to address life's everyday quandaries from the perspective of an ancient sacred text: the Quran.

Organizers of the site, Quranet.net, say they hope it will serve as a "bridge between Islam and the West" by applying the wisdom of Islam's holiest book to modern-day problems.

"We try to transform the Quran into a modern and useful tool, so that every person can find a Quranic answer to modern psychological and educational queries," said Ofer Grosbard, professor at the Academic Arab College for Education, affiliated with Haifa University.

Quranet divides chapters of the Quran into topics such as "Loss, Illness and Tragedy," and provides answers to such questions as, "Is loss an excuse for aggression?" and "What can we say to someone who refuses to accept a gesture of peace?"

The questions are answered with a relevant Quranic verse, followed by an educational-psychological explanation of the issue.

Quranet seeks to illustrate "the beauty of the Quran," said Grosbard, who believes the book's positive messages have been overshadowed by Islamic fundamentalists who've manipulated the text as a justification for terrorism.

The professor came up with the idea for Quranet while teaching a class on developmental psychology to Bedouin graduate students.

He was approached one day after class by Bushra Mazarib, a young Bedouin woman.

"Do you want me to tell you the truth?" she told Grosbard. "Nothing of what you are teaching me will help when a parent may come to me and say, 'The devil has gotten into my son.' "

Western thought and psychological explanations do not speak to a Bedouin Arab's everyday problems, explained Mazarib. The only way to address the issues facing Bedouins -- nomadic Arabs from the deserts of North Africa -- lies in the Quran, she said.

Mazarib plans to work with Bedouin parents as a school counselor. She believes the words of the Quran hold the key to addressing every question those parents may have.

"I want to explain something to parents in a language that they will understand. They don't understand psychology, they only understand the Quran," she tells CNN. "We believe [the Quran] is from God and you cannot question it."

Grosbard was taken with the simplicity of Mazarib's challenge. Soon, he doled out a new assignment: Each of his Bedouin students was to extrapolate the most educational and inspirational verses from the Quran and come up with a short story exemplifying their practicality.

His students were up for the task, returning to class with hundreds of stories from the Quran "that only a Bedouin knows how to tell," Grosbard said.

Storytelling is an intrinsic part of Bedouin culture. Bedouin Arabs, scattered throughout the Negev and Sinai deserts, make up a largely agrarian community.

Some Bedouins, such as Mazarib, live in modern luxury, but the majority live in the same type of rudimentary tents that their ancestors lived in hundreds of years ago.

Before television took over some of homes, extended Bedouin families would sit in the Den, or Diwan, exchanging stories for hours. Grosbard used his students' material to create the Quranet site and its companion book, "Quranet: A Guide for Education."

He hopes Quranet will provide practical advice to help the Muslim community deal with such issues and problems as adolescence, grief, incest, infidelity, violence and tolerance.

Quranet has received praise from prominent sheiks, who wrote a foreword to the book, and the Israeli government, which endorses the project on its Foreign Ministry Web site.

Some Arab media, however, urge Muslims to be wary of an "Israeli Web site" that interprets the Quran to serve the "political agenda" of Israel. Politics aside, the idea of Jewish scholars interpreting or translating Islamic texts is nothing new, said Professor Akbar Ahmed, chair of Islamic Studies at the American University in Washington, D.C.

"Anything that furthers understanding, furthers bridge- building, furthers interfaith friendship is to be encouraged," said Ahmed, who believes some in the Muslim world are bound to be skeptical given the delicate nature of interpreting holy texts.

"If this project has been handled with sensitivity, then Muslims need to look at it on its merit," he said. "Before judging we need to give it a chance."

So far, Quranet is a fledgling site, with no search function or interactive features. It's also written mostly in English, with some passages in Arabic and Hebrew.

Grosbard is seeking funding to expand the site and envisions future Quranet versions in Arabic, Hebrew, Turkish and Persian.

Grosbard hopes the site also will someday have voice-enhanced capability for live chats with illiterate Web users.

As the Internet becomes more readily available in homes worldwide, Mazarib and Grosbard agree the future of Quranet is infinite. "After all," Grosbard said, "there are over 1.5 billion Muslims in the world.

Visit the Web site:

About Ofer Grosbard

Dr. Ofer Grosbard is a clinical psychologist with an additional degree in Conflict Analysis and Resolution from the Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution at George Mason University. An expert in multi-cultural education and psychology; a lecturer at Haifa University; at the Arab Academic College for Education in Haifa and a research fellow at the Israel National Defense College. He published articles and seven books that have been translated into different languages and received awards.

Books:

The Quran: a Guide for Education, with illustrative stories and psychological explanations. Hebrew edition: Ben-Gurion Univ., 2008.
Dialogue - 123 Therapeutic Stories from Traditional Society and their Solution. Hebrew edition: Ben-Gurion Univ., 2007.
Cracking the Cultural Code. Hebrew edition: Ben-Gurion Univ., 2007.
Menachem Begin - A Portrait of a Leader, Biography, Hebrew edition, Resling, Tel Aviv, 2006. English edition: The National Defense College 2007. Based on Ph.D. dissertation, George Mason University, U.S.
Israel on the Couch - The Psychology of the Peace Process, Hebrew edition, Yediot Ahronot, Tel-Aviv, 2000; German edition, Patmos, 2001; English edition, SUNY, January 2003.
The Arab Within, a political-psychological novel which attempts to explain the deeply-rooted emotions involved in the Israel-Arab conflict. Published in Hebrew in 2000 by Tamuz Publishers;
License for Insanity, a novel about an adolescent girl undergoing psychoanalysis in a psychiatric ward. Published in Hebrew, Yaron Golan, 1994.
Awards
Quranet - a Bridge between Islam and the West - which is based upon the book "The Quran: a Guide for Education" - was chosen to represent Israel in "Facing Tomorrow" - the Israeli Presidential Conference 2008.
Menachem Begin - A Portrait of a Leader, Biography, awarded Menachem Begin Heritage Center Research Prize for year 2004.
The Arab Within was awarded the Hebrew Writers Association's Book of the Year prize, 2000.



Shouldnt that be the other way round. Why do Muslims hate Jews?
Till this day i have never heard a Jewish person slaging off a Muslim. They tend to keeep themselves to themselves.

You always hear Muslims coming out with crap like dont drink coke (as in coca cola) coz its made by a Jewish company.

No not the gum drop buttons! – Gingy

Well, some people who are Jews are very anti-Muslim and Palestine, going as far as saying that they are terrorists and shouldn't live in Israel. But are all Jews like this? No. Are all Muslims like this? No. And that's just something we all have to get in our heads.

“Before death takes away what you are given, give away whatever there is to give.”

Mawlana Jalal ud Din Rumi

Naz wrote:
Shouldnt that be the other way round. Why do Muslims hate Jews?
Till this day i have never heard a Jewish person slaging off a Muslim. They tend to keeep themselves to themselves.

You always hear Muslims coming out with crap like dont drink coke (as in coca cola) coz its made by a Jewish company.

they don't say that coz they don't like jews, its coz they believe the company supports Israel!

'Allah gives and forgives
Man gets and forgets' Baba Ali

Coke has/had a plant in Gaza giving the locals jobs.

We should drink more and let out bones rot just to support them.

"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.

Young Anonymous Muslimah wrote:
Naz wrote:
Shouldnt that be the other way round. Why do Muslims hate Jews?
Till this day i have never heard a Jewish person slaging off a Muslim. They tend to keeep themselves to themselves.

You always hear Muslims coming out with crap like dont drink coke (as in coca cola) coz its made by a Jewish company.

they don't say that coz they don't like jews, its coz they believe the company supports Israel!

Round my end they are Jew haters. It has nothing to do with Isreal and Palestine.

No not the gum drop buttons! – Gingy

Salam

There is nothing wrong with owning good companies.

Jews and Muslims both own many of the top brands around the world.

So what?

Omrow

You Can't Sterotype Every Jew As The Same.
So Really, It'd Be Wrong To Answer This Question.
Wouldn't It?.

Anonymous wrote:
You Can't Sterotype Every Jew As The Same.
So Really, It'd Be Wrong To Answer This Question.
Wouldn't It?.

Precisely!

'Allah gives and forgives
Man gets and forgets' Baba Ali

No it would not.

Generalisations are IMO ok. and it never means ALL - it mostly means MOST. Big difference.

When the Qur'an talks about communities of the past, it does not say 95.438% of them did something...

Saying that, I doubt they hate Muslims. Why would they?

Feel threatened may be as, well, the Israeli's should and a lot of them are Jewish.

"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.

Jews typically don't hate Islam. Additionally a large segment of the community is particularly westernised and as enlightened as most of us here, and then some aren't. Lately all the same I don't imagine jihadi stuff has done Islam any favours with anyone.

^ J de V

Anonymous wrote:
^ J de V

I can see that.

“Before death takes away what you are given, give away whatever there is to give.”

Mawlana Jalal ud Din Rumi

I think that was J de V claiming the above post so as not to cause confusion.

"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.

I can see that too.

“Before death takes away what you are given, give away whatever there is to give.”

Mawlana Jalal ud Din Rumi

good.

"For too long, we have been a passively tolerant society, saying to our citizens 'as long as you obey the law, we will leave you alone'" - David Cameron, UK Prime Minister. 13 May 2015.

Salam

I think future is bright.

Arabs and Jews have agreed to live in peace:

Quote:

"Arabs ready for peace with Israel"

Arab states say they wish to "enter into a peace deal" with Israel.

Arab League's Amr Moussa and Saudi Prince Saud al-Faisal said Arabs are ready to reach a lasting peace with Israel.

Arab statement to Israel said: "The Arab side is ready to establish a just and lasting peace with Israel in line with the land-for-peace principle, the Arab Peace Initiative, and relevant UN resolutions."

Good. Enough with the fighting all the time.

Omrow

I dont think Jews hates Islam. They just hate Muslims.

Muslims hate Jews because they hate them back and this makes Jews hate Muslims for hating them in the first place.

This vicious circle leads leads to war which will decide who stays and who goes.

In 2008, Israel launched war on Gaza as Obama won the Satanic elections for the first time. Now again in 2012, Israel killed Hamas commander and started the war after Obama won elections in Great Satan. Both times Satan backed Jews. Satan really wants Jews dead. God does not.

 

BBC says Israel started the war. Satan pushed them into it.

2013. Last Year for Israel.

This latest war could be the final war before 2014 destruction of Israel by Satan.

End of Jews is Nigh. Repent and Leave Satan.

Satan is confusing the Jews. They need to wake up now before its too late for them.

 

Ayatollah rightly named America as "Great Satan".

in terms of majority yes

O you who have believed, do not take the Jews and the Christians as allies. They are [in fact] allies of one another. And whoever is an ally to them among you - then indeed, he is [one] of them. Indeed, Allah guides not the wrongdoing people. 5:51