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The Axis massacred hundreds of Muslim POWs whom it mistook for Jews

In the months following [the Axis] invasion of the Soviet Union, SS squads — the so‐called Einsatzgruppen — executed hundreds of Muslim prisoners of war who had fought in the Red Army, assuming that their circumcision proved that they were Jewish.¹

In Berlin, these executions soon became the subject of controversy. During a meeting of officers of the Wehrmacht, SS and Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories in summer 1941, Erwin von Lahousen, an official of the Wehrmacht intelligence agency representing his boss, Wilhelm Canaris, engaged in a row with the head of the Gestapo, Heinrich Müller, about these killings.

Lahousen brought up the selection of hundreds of Muslim Tatars, who had been sent to ‘special treatment’ because they were taken for Jews. Müller acknowledged that the SS had made mistakes in this respect, remarking that it was the first time that he had heard that Muslims were circumcised like Jews.

A few weeks later, Müller’s superior, Reinhard Heydrich, chief of the Reich Security Main Office, sent out instructions urging the Einsatzgruppen to be more careful: The ‘circumcision’ and ‘Jewish appearance’ could not be taken as sufficient ‘proof of Jewish descent’, he made clear.² Muslims and Jews were not to be confused.

In the following year, the Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories issued a similar directive on the identification of ‘Jews’ in the Eastern territories, warning that only in the western Russian territories could circumcision be seen as a proof of Jewishness. ‘In those regions, though, in which Mohammedans exist we will not be able to base the Jewishness of the person on circumcision alone’.³ There, other indicators, such as names, origins and ethnic appearance, had to be considered as well.

(Emphasis added. Source.)

It is a matter of historical record that Muslims have been victims of both anti-Judaism and antisemitism. As David M. Freidenreich opulently documented in his work Jewish Muslims: How Christians Imagined Islam as the Enemy, Christian xenophobes often saw Jews and Muslims as partners in crime, Islam a de facto sect of Judaism, and xenophobic polemicists tapped into familiar anti-Jewish tropes to demonize Muslims (whom they usually called ‘Saracens’, ‘Moors’, ‘Turks’ and the like).

Although Berlin and Rome both tried to appeal to upper-class as well as ultranationalist Muslims, we see here that both régimes had lacklustre understandings of Muslim cultures, as did the protofascists then and the neofascists now. This particular example is simply the most tragic consequence of their ignorance, but it is also a reminder that anybody can become a victim of antisemitism. It is true that it affects Gentiles less often, and it would be wrong even if it never affected us at all, but instances of collateral damage like this are powerful wake-up calls in times of widespread apathy.

Further reading: ‘Remembering the Muslims Murdered at Auschwitz

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