ZenHalfTimeCrock
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A little look into the Koran would answer that question for you !
There's no doubt that anti-semitism is presently rife in the Muslim world, as evidenced by the opening paragraph of Chapter 13 of Ed Husain's acclaimed book The House of Islam: A Global History. However, as the author goes on to explain, this has not always been the case. The chapter as a whole is too long to post here but after providing a historical overview of Muslim-Jewish relations, Husain provides a robust defence of the virtues of the modern state of Israel (though one that is curiously based on an appeal to its economic vibrancy and dynamism).
However, it was the Qur'an that you mentioned. So let's cover that as well. The following is an extract from CTR Hewer's Understanding Islam: The First Ten Steps. It's a less well known but excellent introduction to the faith and Hewer covers plenty of ground in a few short paragraphs. Accordingly, here they are:
Of course, there are anti-Semitic hadiths as well. But those are dealt with in Jonathan AC Brown's Misquoting Muhammad. Been a long time since I read his book but, from failing memory, like the one about the 72 virgins, the chain of transmission or isnad is weak in each instance.
Lastly, in his brief but estimable survey Islamic History: A Very Short Introduction, Adam Silverstein has this to say:
'...the anti-Semitic theories that are widely espoused by Muslims aiming to reverse the effects of colonialism and imperialism (for which, according to these theories, the Jews are responsible), are themselves Western imperialist products - Muslim societies had nothing like them until [Christian] Arabs imported the ideas from Europe to Muslim lands in the 19th centuries.'