One of the greatest Jewish theologians practiced in the Arab world (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maimonides) without suffering from a pogrom.
Persecution of Jews by corrupt and/or misguided Christians in Medieval Europe was no more justified than forced conversion, dhimmi submission or extermination under Muslim overlords. The difference, however, which you keep disingenuously ignoring, is that the Christians who were persecuting the Jews were doing so contrary to the teachings of Jesus, while the Muslims were following Mohammed's explicit instructions. Another difference is that Christianity evolved and eventually repudiated and ceased officially sanctioning Jewish persecution - Islam remains the same.
Moses Maimonides and his family, like the rest of the Jews in Cordoba, were forced to either convert to Islam or leave their home under threat of death by Muslim rulers. The fact that they found sanctuary in Egypt under different circumstances doesn't change the fact that it was Islam that did that to them.
Further, even in Egypt, although they were allowed to live, they were still dhimmis. They did not have the same rights as Muslims, they were still subject to the jizya tax, and in a myriad of other ways they were second-class citizens.
Your continuing attempts to foist a false cultural and moral equivalence is simply unsupportable either historically or morally/ethically. The brutal fact is that while Jews and Christians are "People of the Book", they will never be accorded the same equal rights and treatment under Islam that they freely extend to Muslims. They have always been and will always be considered by Muslims as second-class citizens and inferior to Muslims. And, as soon as Muslims gain control of a society, they will be treated as such.
We could start with the Book of Acts, where there were constant conflicts, some violent, against Jews who did not accept Jesus. While there are many others I could mention, Martin Luther, the founder of Protestantism, was explicitly anti-semitic in many forms and fashions. During most of the Christian era, Jews were restricted to a limited list of professions, were constantly faced with accusations of blood libel, and were victims of many pogroms over the years.
Dhimmitude, while oppressive, left behind a history of Jewish theological writings and culture that are far more prolific than European ones. And, if you had a choice between 6 million Jews murdered and countless others dislocated, or 1 million kicked out of Arab lands in the era after the founding of the Israeli state, then I would choose the latter.
Andrew Bostom has written books about Islamic anti-semitism. The Muslims were worse for Jews than the European Christians...That’s how it seems to me.