Subject: [Fwd: FW: Documentary- Besa: Muslims Who  Saved Jews in World War 
II.]

Interesting article...

Ali  Asani
Professor of Indo-Muslim and Islamic Religion and Cultures
Harvard  University Study of Religion Barker Center 305
12 Quincy St Cambridge, Ma.  02138
phone: 617-495-5755
fax:  617-496-5798


Dear  Friends:

I thought  this would be of interest to all of you. While spending some 
time at the  Holocaust Museum in Houston, I was able to get quite a bit of 
information on the  new documentary: Besa: Muslims Who Saved Jews in World War 
II.  

Here is a preview of the documentary. Please view.  
_http://www.jwmprods.com/Productions/God-s-House_ 
(http://www.jwmprods.com/Productions/God-s-House) 




Article written by Eboo Patel, Executive Director of  the
Interfaith Youth Core and White House Council on Faith-Based
and  Neighborhood Partnerships.

When Muslims Saved  Jews

"As Muslims we welcomed them all.  We welcomed them with bread, salt, and 
our hearts."

We hear many accounts  of what happened during the Holocaust. The 
atrocities committed; the times and  places in which unspeakable acts against 
humankind occurred; the millions of  lives stolen too soon.

But the story told above by Nazlie Alla, whose  Albanian Muslim family 
sheltered Jews from Greece, Slovakia, and Germany, is  less well known. It's 
hard to imagine that in any European country there were  more Jews at the end 
of World War II than before it began. But almost every  single Jew in 
Albania, whether they were Albanians or refugees from other  nations, survived 
during the German occupation.

And Albania was the only  European country to have a Muslim majority. The 
Jews were protected, through the  raids and searches and the times in 
between, by Albanians who followed the  national code of Besa: a code of honor, 
the 
deepest promise a person can give,  and the word that is never broken. 
Under Besa, Albanians took Jews into their  homes, treated them as family, fed 
and clothed them, and sacrificed their own  safety and the safety of their 
families for the sake of
their  guests.

Norman Gershman, a photographer and historian who traveled  throughout 
Albania documenting the accounts of Muslim families who protected  Jews, put 
out 
a book entitled Besa: Muslims who Saved Jews in World War II. He  recalled 
that "What Besa says is that if some one knocks on your door you have  an 
absolute obligation - no matter who that person is - to save their  lives."

Albania at the time had  around 800,000 citizens, only about 200 of whom 
were Jewish - though over 2,000  refugee Jews from Greece, Austria and Italy 
were taken in to the homes of  Albanians as well. And it wasn't just Muslims 
making sacrifices - the entire  population, approximately 70% Bektashi 
Muslim, 20% Orthodox Christians and 10%  Catholic -
risked their lives to save Jewish strangers.

The stories of  righteous Muslims in Gershman's book reveal that they 
understood Besa as an  expression of the Qur'anic teachings of mercy, 
hospitality, and protecting the  weak. Kujtim Civeja, a member of a traditional 
Muslim 
family of scholars, said  "Our father wrote that when he had the opportunity 
and privilege to shelter so  many Jewish families it gave him joy to put 
into practice his Islamic faith. To  be generous is a virtue."

Hamdi Mece  explained "We never took money from those we sheltered. We took 
them in under  our Besa. We are true Muslims, and God granted us the 
privilege of saving Jews.  All life is precious and given by God. To save a 
life 
is God's  gift."

Each portrait of a righteous person in this book is moving. But  one in 
particular - Sadik Kalaja, who was twelve years old when his family  sheltered 
a Yugoslav Jewish couple, allowing them to light Sabbath candles in  their 
home - struck me. 

He said "My father gave us an order: If there is  a knock on the door, take 
responsibility." It's an ethic of the Qur'an, it's an  ethic of Albanian 
national tradition and it should be an ethic of the 21st  century.


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