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A former Muslim-turned-Christian apologist asserts in a new column that Palestinians have bought into anti-Israel lies that he was taught during his youth and that Israel must launch a media outreach to combat the false narratives. 

Brother Rachid, a Moroccan-born Christian apologist who hosts the show Lets Be Clear on Alkarma TV, writes in the column at All Arab News that he grew up with a sense of anger towards Jews.In school, we were regularly exposed to distressing images of Palestinian children being killed, arrested, and mistreated by Israeli soldiers, Rachid wrote. This prompted us to write essays and recite poems in support of their cause, often citing religious texts against the Jews. At the mosque, sermons frequently condemned Jews, and during our prayers, we fervently invoked divine retribution upon Israel and the Zionists.

When Iraqi President Saddam Hussein fired SCUD ballistic missiles at Israel in 1990, Rachid and his friends rejoiced. 

I distinctly recall women in our neighborhood expressing their joy through wailing ululations each time news of an Iraqi attack on Israel aired on our local TV news broadcast, he wrote. Moroccan newspapers even published political cartoons and caricatures, portraying Israelis in a state of extreme fear due to Saddams actions.

Years later, when suicide bombers targeted Israel in the early 2000s, the Arab media once again portrayed Israelis as the aggressors, killing Palestinians who were portrayed as innocent victims and merely trying to resist occupation and reclaim their homeland.

It is difficult to articulate the depth of pain, hatred, and anger that consumed us, Rachid wrote.

The current conflict in Gaza is following a similar pattern, he asserted.

I can vividly recall how I was religiously manipulated by Muslim clerics, newspapers, and TV anchors to embrace a cause that, upon reflection, was based on lies, he wrote. Like millions in the Muslim world, I grew up a victim of relentless propaganda that indoctrinated children to harbor vicious, anti-Semitic, and anti-Israel sentiments based on a completely distorted view of reality. Today, by Gods grace, however, Ive undergone a significant transformation.

Rachid has spent much of his time educating himself about the conflict and about the anti-Israel lies he heard, he wrote. 

The narrative we received omitted crucial details, like the fact that there never existed a distinct Arab country named Palestine in all of human history, he wrote. The narrative also conveniently overlooked the United Nations proposal in 1947 for two states, one for the Jews and one for the Palestinians, which the Arabs rejected, opting for war instead. 

It was never communicated to us that Jews faced terrible persecution in numerous Muslim countries in the Middle East and North Africa in the years before the establishment of Israel, leading them to seek a secure homeland. Instead, we were fed a narrative depicting Jews as outsiders from Europe who unlawfully seized land that didnt belong to them. What we werent told was that Jews did, in fact, reside in the Holy Land for thousands of years before the 20th century.

He had never heard that, in the Bible, God gave the Jewish people the land of Israel as an everlasting possession.

We werent told that it was the Europeans specifically, the Roman Empire who cruelly drove the Jewish people of Israel out of the Holy Land and scattered them all over the earth, he wrote. We werent told that Adolf Hitler and his Nazi regime exterminated six million European Jews in the Holocaust. Nor were we told that Jews from Europe joined those 850,000 Jews expelled from Arab and Muslim countries to re-establish their ancient homeland in the Biblical land of Israel.

We certainly werent told that the Jewish people didnt steal the Holy Land, Rachid wrote. Rather, encouraged to return to the Holy Land by international documents and proclamations like the Balfour Declaration and the San Remo conference, the Jews began immigrating there, legally purchased land, began building homes and farms and communities and peacefully tried to settle there. Only much later did I learn that the Arab natives who pursued peace with the Jews were accepted to be part of the newly formed state and became lawful citizens of Israel. Only later did I learn that approximately two million Arabs are citizens of Israel today, about 20 percent of the entire population, with all the legal rights of Jewish Israelis.

The false narrative about Israel he heard as a youngster is still circulating and is even being fed to youth in the United States and other Western countries, he wrote. 

Kids on TikTok and other social media platforms are repeating the same lies I learned when I was a kid, he wrote. Even students in prominent American Universities and colleges are adopting the same false narrative. Money from Qatar and the power of its media arms are spreading this misinformation everywhere. 

Its time, he wrote, for Israel to invest much more aggressively in media outreach to combat these lies, recognizing that the battle extends beyond physical conflict into the realm of ideas, to effectively counter the global anti-Semitism and baseless anger generated by such false narratives.

Photo Courtesy: ‘Brother Rachid’s Story’/Call of Love Ministries via YouTube

Video Courtesy: Call of Love Ministries via YouTube

Michael Foust has covered the intersection of faith and news for 20 years. His stories have appeared in Baptist Press, Christianity Today, The Christian Post, the Leaf-Chronicle, the Toronto Star and the Knoxville News-Sentinel.

READ: THE CONFLICT IN ISRAEL: WHAT CAN I DO? Immediate Humanitarian Aid Needed3 Ways to Pray for Israel5 Powerful Prayers for IsraelA Prayer against Anti-Semitism

LISTEN: Christian Podcasts about Israel

The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of Salem Web Network and Salem Media Group.

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Putin wasn’t at the White House, but his influence was – the moments which reveal his hold over Trump

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Putin wasn't at the White House, but his influence was - the moments which reveal his hold over Trump

Vladimir Putin wasn’t at the White House but his influence clearly was. At times, it dominated the room.

There were three key moments that revealed the Russian president‘s current hold over Donald Trump.

The first was in the Oval Office. Sitting alongside Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the US president told reporters: “I don’t think you need a ceasefire.”

Ukraine talks latest: Zelenskyy ‘ready to meet’ Putin after Trump summit

Vladimir Putin shaking hands with Donald Trump when they met last week. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Vladimir Putin shaking hands with Donald Trump when they met last week. Pic: Reuters

It was a stunning illustration of Mr Trump’s about-face in his approach to peace. For the past six months, a ceasefire has been his priority, but after meeting Mr Putin in Alaska, suddenly it’s not.

Confirmation that he now views the war through Moscow’s eyes.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Trump applauds Putin and shares ride in ‘The Beast’ last week

The second was the format itself, with Mr Trump reverting to his favoured ask-what-you-like open-ended Q&A.

In Alaska, Mr Putin wasn’t made to take any questions – most likely, because he didn’t want to. But here, Mr Zelenskyy didn’t have a choice. He was subjected to a barrage of them to see if he’d learnt his lesson from last time.

It was a further demonstration of the special status Mr Trump seems to afford to Mr Putin.

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The third was their phone call. Initially, President Trump said he’d speak to the Kremlin leader after his meeting with European leaders. But it turned out to be during it.

A face-to-face meeting with seven leaders was interrupted for a phone call with one – as if Mr Trump had to check first with Mr Putin, before continuing his discussions.

We still don’t know the full details of the peace proposal that’s being drawn up, but all this strongly suggests that it’s one sketched out by Russia. The White House is providing the paper, but the Kremlin is holding the pen.

Read more:
Four key takeaways from the White House Ukraine summit
Trump has taken peace talks a distance not seen since the war began

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Trump, Zelenskyy and the suit: What happened?

For Moscow, the aim now is to keep Mr Trump on their path to peace, which is settlement first, ceasefire later.

It believes that’s the best way of securing its goals, because it has more leverage so long as the fighting continues.

👉 Listen to Sky News Daily on your podcast app 👈      

But Mr Putin will be wary that Mr Trump is pliable and can easily change his mind, depending on the last person he spoke to.

So to ensure that his sympathies aren’t swayed, and its red lines remain intact, Russia will be straining to keep its voice heard.

On Monday, for example, the Russian foreign ministry was quick to condemn recent comments from the UK government that it would be ready to send troops to help enforce any ceasefire.

It described the idea as “provocative” and “predatory”.

Moscow is trying to drown out European concerns by portraying itself as the party that wants peace the most, and Kyiv (and Europe) as the obstacle.

But while Mr Zelenskyy has agreed to a trilateral meeting, the Kremlin has not. After the phone call between Mr Putin and Mr Trump, it said the leaders discussed “raising the level of representatives” in the talks between Russia and Ukraine. No confirmation to what level.

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US

Putin wasn’t at the White House, but his influence was – the moments which reveal his hold over Trump

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By

Putin wasn't at the White House, but his influence was - the moments which reveal his hold over Trump

Vladimir Putin wasn’t at the White House but his influence clearly was. At times, it dominated the room.

There were three key moments that revealed the Russian president‘s current hold over Donald Trump.

The first was in the Oval Office. Sitting alongside Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the US president told reporters: “I don’t think you need a ceasefire.”

Ukraine talks latest: Zelenskyy ‘ready to meet’ Putin after Trump summit

Vladimir Putin shaking hands with Donald Trump when they met last week. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Vladimir Putin shaking hands with Donald Trump when they met last week. Pic: Reuters

It was a stunning illustration of Mr Trump’s about-face in his approach to peace. For the past six months, a ceasefire has been his priority, but after meeting Mr Putin in Alaska, suddenly it’s not.

Confirmation that he now views the war through Moscow’s eyes.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Trump applauds Putin and shares ride in ‘The Beast’ last week

The second was the format itself, with Mr Trump reverting to his favoured ask-what-you-like open-ended Q&A.

In Alaska, Mr Putin wasn’t made to take any questions – most likely, because he didn’t want to. But here, Mr Zelenskyy didn’t have a choice. He was subjected to a barrage of them to see if he’d learnt his lesson from last time.

It was a further demonstration of the special status Mr Trump seems to afford to Mr Putin.

👉 Follow Trump100 on your podcast app 👈

The third was their phone call. Initially, President Trump said he’d speak to the Kremlin leader after his meeting with European leaders. But it turned out to be during it.

A face-to-face meeting with seven leaders was interrupted for a phone call with one – as if Mr Trump had to check first with Mr Putin, before continuing his discussions.

We still don’t know the full details of the peace proposal that’s being drawn up, but all this strongly suggests that it’s one sketched out by Russia. The White House is providing the paper, but the Kremlin is holding the pen.

Read more:
Four key takeaways from the White House Ukraine summit
Trump has taken peace talks a distance not seen since the war began

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Trump, Zelenskyy and the suit: What happened?

For Moscow, the aim now is to keep Mr Trump on their path to peace, which is settlement first, ceasefire later.

It believes that’s the best way of securing its goals, because it has more leverage so long as the fighting continues.

👉 Listen to Sky News Daily on your podcast app 👈      

But Mr Putin will be wary that Mr Trump is pliable and can easily change his mind, depending on the last person he spoke to.

So to ensure that his sympathies aren’t swayed, and its red lines remain intact, Russia will be straining to keep its voice heard.

On Monday, for example, the Russian foreign ministry was quick to condemn recent comments from the UK government that it would be ready to send troops to help enforce any ceasefire.

It described the idea as “provocative” and “predatory”.

Moscow is trying to drown out European concerns by portraying itself as the party that wants peace the most, and Kyiv (and Europe) as the obstacle.

But while Mr Zelenskyy has agreed to a trilateral meeting, the Kremlin has not. After the phone call between Mr Putin and Mr Trump, it said the leaders discussed “raising the level of representatives” in the talks between Russia and Ukraine. No confirmation to what level.

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US

Trump brokers Putin and Zelenskyy meeting

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Trump brokers Putin and Zelenskyy meeting

👉 Follow Trump100 on your podcast app 👈 

Donald Trump wants to set up a face-to-face meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. How would that work? And would it accelerate peace in Ukraine?

Zelenskyy and other European leaders made their way to Washington DC. What was their goal? To make sure Trump is still on their side – and to make sure he’s not got too close to Putin and his plans to annex parts of Ukraine after the pair met in Alaska.

How much of a turning point was the White House summit in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine?

If you’ve got a question you’d like the Trump100 team to answer, you can email it to trump100@sky.uk.

You can also watch all episodes – including the interview with Tim – on our YouTube channel.

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