Thursday, June 25, 2009

Mizrahi refugees, summed up in 26 words

David Shasha - a US Jew of Syrian origin - is considered an authority on Jews from Arab countries by 'progressives' such as 'rabbi' Michael Lerner of Tikkun. But Shasha's views are superficial and unrepresentative, argues Israel Bonan. He should know: Bonan was forced out of Egypt in 1967 wearing a torn shirt and broken spectacles. Here's his rebuttal to David Shasha's "Why Jews left Arab Lands" a Progressive Sephardic view (Via Zionation:)

"Allow me to briefly introduce myself. My name is Israel Bonan, I am a Mizrahi Jew. I was born in Cairo, Egypt in the mid 1940s. I was expelled from Egypt in 1967, and left with a torn shirt on my back, and a pair of mangled glasses, broken intentionally, on my face, and with very little else.

"I am considered by any descriptive measure, a bona fide "refugee", a designation echoed by the United Nation High Commissioner of Refugees UNHCR, on behalf of the more than 800,000 displaced Mizrahi Jews fleeing the Arab countries (expressed twice, in 1957 and subsequently in 1967). I currently reside in the Boston area in the US.

"I have been familiar with Mr. Shasha's views for quite sometimes now, and I find it disquieting that his positions, which run contrary to the factual history of the era and the conventional wisdom of the Mizrahi community, or as he prefers to call us "the Arab Jews", are taken as representative, when they are not.

"It never ceases to amaze me, that Mr. Shasha who likes to refer to himself as an Arab Jew, though born in the US, has such a meager understanding, of the history of the era and about what constitutes a refugee or to dwell with any depth about their lot. Be that as it may.

"I find that Mr. Shasha's logic and the common thread in his writings, have always consisted of three major assertions; making his discourse monotonously predictable and invariably repetitive.

"One, life was always rosy for the Jews living in Arab lands and Israel's creation, as a cataclysmic watershed event, is the only cause for disrupting such an idyllic life.

"Two, Israel as a product of an Ashkenazi culture, that is European by nature, has always suppressed, repressed and maligned the Mizrahi community and treated them as second class citizens; though they do represent, according to Shasha, the most effective group to undertake any peace initiative and dialog with the Arabs, having shared their culture, albeit without the author postulating any specific ideas as to the who, the why, the what, the when or for that matter, the how.

"Finally, and he shares that notion with his counterpart (and much quoted resource in his writings) Professor Yehuda Shenhav; that it is unconscionable nay, immoral, to compare the plight of the Mizrahi Jews with that of the Palestinian Refugees.

"Once again in the cited article, he did not disappoint, neither did he deviate from his usual template, but merely continued his revisionist approach to the Mizrahi historical narrative.

"Extremism by its very nature does not allow for a tempered view of events or for cogent reflective analysis. The end result is always black or white; so regardless of how carefully and temperately Mr. Shasha seems to preface his views, the end result is always the same … black or white, all or nothing.

"It is strange to note that in Mr. Shasha's attempt at historical fairness and balance, he used the following 26 words, in an article of more than 3300 words: :
"
"Some arrived of their own free will; others arrived against their will. Some lived comfortably and securely in Arab lands; others suffered from fear and oppression.

That was the extent of defining what really happened to the Mizrahi Jews in an article titled: "Why the Jews left Arab lands," and you know what, Mr. Shasha is right!! Now if we can only take those 26 words and flesh them out a bit more with the historical facts of the matter, we get a totally different unfolding narrative that is not steeped in demonizing a country or a refugee class, or in cataclysmically defining some watershed events while glossing over others.

I took pains to chronicle my own personal Exodus ordeal, in "A Personal Exodus Story" after more than 35 years of silence. Shasha wrote:

It is curious that in a world that has largely ignored the voices of Arab Jews, the few we hear are filled with anger, resentment and hostility toward Arabs.

I invite Mr. Shasha to read it and to tell me, how much hate he can attribute to me vis-à-vis my Egyptian tormentors or Arabs in general, after reading it. By my accounting, none; yet I will let him be the judge. It is not hate, nor rancor or anger that motivates us to speak out as the "Forgotten Refugees". It is done out of fairness not retribution, it is about justice after having our human rights trampled upon and above all to record our own history that should not be denied us.

In a co-authored article with Dr. Rami Mangoubi titled: "Zionism for the ages", we rebutted the first two of Shasha's stated positions and in my article titled: "The Banana Jews"I took Professor Shenhav to task in rebuttal to his article "Hitching a ride on the magic carpet" about the third topic you both share.

In a nutshell, and again I happen to agree with Mr. Shasha, the Jews of Egypt participated fully and in greater proportion to their numbers in all aspects of life in Egypt; they more than made their mark on the cultural and economic landscape of the country. Where we disagreed with David Shasha, is that he chose the watershed event of the creation of the State of Israel as the turning point without which life in Egypt (and ergo the rest of the Arab countries) would have remained idyllic.

Idyllic indeed, when law after law (as far back as 1869), before even Zionism was spoken of, was enacted to limit access to citizenship for the Jews of Egypt in the country of our birth. through successive Nationality decrees and laws (of 1929).

Idyllic indeed, when law after law was enacted, to economically ethnic cleanse the Jews and other minorities by passing the Company law (of 1947) to restrict Jews and other minorities from access to work in the private and public sectors.

Idyllic indeed, when the Nationalization law (of the mid 1950s) was enacted, to deprive the members of our community of their remaining assets and businesses. Lest I forget and be judged guilty of omission, many other minorities at the time also suffered through this ordeal.

We also touched on the issue of the class system that favored the Ashkenazi community over the Mizrahi community; only to find ourselves citing some top government leadership roles that are today studded and replete with Mizrahi Jews. Mr. Shasha, class struggles are just that, they are struggles to improve one's status and to raise the ante for the whole country to improve, through an honest and thriving competitive spirit; and it will always will be and better be, a work in progress; for everyone's sake.

In my rebuttal of the third point, I wrote at length of my experience and that of my parents' experience and about what a refugee is, because it is not about being an armchair apologist or being a Monday morning quarterback. It is about the suffering experienced, the dislocation, the angst associated with what was left behind and for one having to start rebuilding a life in one's old age. It is also about leaving behind a culture, a way of life and the familiar. Undoubtedly the older refugee generation has suffered, more so, than the younger one.

Are Mr Shasha and Professor Shenhav, neither of them refugees, being intentionally obtuse and blind to the fact that it is more than just assets and businesses that matter to a refugee, especially the ones who were left with nothing to call their own?

That takes me back again to the twenty-six words I alluded to earlier, and Shasha's attempt to cover all the bases for historical completeness. In the process Shasha saw only what he wanted to see and felt what he could only touch; the rest to Shasha, remained conceptual, at arm's length and clinically sterile.

As part of my public speaking educational campaign about the Mizrahi Jews "The Forgotten Refugees", I always stress the fact that the Middle East narrative has been one-sided for far too long and that our history needs to be disseminated. I also never neglect to touch on the issue of the two refugee populations, as a study in contrasts; the same event (the creation of the State of Israel), that affected two classes of refugees, The Mizrahi Jews, the "Forgotten Refugees" and the Palestinian refugees and what became of them, after the fact.

They both started undeniably with a lot of hardships. The Mizrahi Jews who left for Israel, had to live in tents and ma'abarot (refugee camps), but not for long and in the process they helped and were part and parcel of creating a new country.

The Mizrahi Jews who were resettled elsewhere, invariably found the Jewish community at large eager to help, to get them started in their new life and they rebuilt their lives in the country of their choice.

On the other hand the Palestinian refugees, for the most part, were denied absorption in the Arab countries; they were left in camps as wards of the UN for over 60 years and they passed their refugee status much like an inheritance to the fourth generation. All this dehumanizing behavior on the part of their Arab brethren was simply for political expediency and never once did the Palestinian refugees' dignity enter into anyone's consideration.

This is my narrative, this is my parent's narrative, this is the Mizrahi Jews' narrative and we will not be denied our history. It is pathetic to hear Shasha suggest that he speaks for me or for the Mizrahi Jews; his perspective is flawed and does not add much value to the historical narrative of the era. Indeed, as Shasha wrote:

"Arab Jewish voices have today largely been silenced, and with that silencing has come the lamentable absence of a perspective that could allow us to see the Middle East in different ways."

One last note, that is conspicuously absent from Shasha's writings, save for the inherent braggadocio vis-à-vis the Arabs. I again happen to share Shasha's notion, as I truly believe that the Mizrahi Jews are in a unique position to enhance the dialog between Israel and her Arab neighbors.

To resolve an ongoing feud, as ingrained in the Middle Eastern culture, both sides have to acknowledge and fully account for what they had done to each other. Admission and full accounting, is a prime imperative to reach a "sulha" or a sustainable peace. Yet we find the Arab governments in total denial about having harmed their Jewish communities.



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10 comments:

  1. AS to Michael Lerner, he calls himself a rabbi but I would like to know where he got his rabbinic "smikha". Israel Bonan expresses himself beautifully with great clarity. As to David Shasha, his writing is very slick and I have seen of his way of expressing himself before, not necessarily in regard to the Arab-Israel or Arab-Jewish conflicts.

    "The absence of a perspective that could allow us to see the Middle East in different ways".

    I really am irked by the slickness of this remark. What Shasha wants to do with it is to promote the assumption implied in the statement that the claim that "the Arabs have always been mean to Jews" has been some sort of dominant narrative whereas, I believe, the narrative that Shasha promotes has long been the dominant one. In fact, major publications such as the NYTimes have often promoted the same narrative as Shasha does in their columns and articles, although their news articles sometimes contradicted it.

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  2. I think people like Shasha have shifted their position somewhat - from denying that Jews left 'of their own free will', they now admit they fled under duress. . But the Arab 'backlash' is highly excusable since it was a response to the 'unjust' creation of the 'Zionist entity'. Before Israel, of course, as Bonan writes sarcastically, life for Jews in Arab countries ws idyllic.

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  3. Bataween, you mentioned the often-repeated but false notion that the Arab "backlash" was justified because of the creation of Israel: I'd like to add that anyone claiming that the Arab "backlash" was justified is endorsing collective punishment, and is in absolutely no position to criticize Israel for supposedly inflicting "collective punishment" on the Gazans.

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  4. Victor
    Of course no backlash resulting in collective punishment is defensible, but apologists are always rationalising Islamist terrorism as a 'backlash' to western foreign policy, or violent Muslim riots as a 'backlash' to offensive cartoons. So it is with the creation of Israel. Just another means of 'blaming the victim', really.

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  5. Bataween, Just to clarify -- I was not criticizing any of your own assertions but rather the repeated assertion by anti-Israel hypocrites that the Arab "backlash" against Jews in their lands was an "understandable" response to the creation of Israel. Of course we all know that's nonsense. I only wanted to point out the double standard of those who criticize Israel for so-called "collective punishment" against Palestinians and at the same time "justify" as "understandable" the collective punishment inflicted by Arabs.

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  6. Dear Victor
    No, I understand what you are saying but it makes me wonder why Arabs and Muslims are not only excused, but expected to behave in this way! A kind of patronising racism, perhaps?

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  7. Bataween, it probably is a patronizing form of racism, but I also think it's part & parcel of an overall hypocrisy that one sees all too often among lefists. For example, I recall an argument between an American journalist and the former (thank God!!) mayor of London, Ken Livingstone. The journalist was arguing that Stalin was an evil man, and Livingstone argued he was NOT evil (never mind that he murdered literally tens of millions! Livingstone looks the other way). The left excuses Stalin, saying that he had "good intentions" to build a better society or they would say that he was trying to create a better society "under difficult circumstances." They fabricate all kinds of excuses. Jean-Paul Sartre remained an unrepentant Stalinist till the end. Similarly, the left doesn't want to hear that Chairman Mao murdered tens of millions either. And they demonize the US for dropping A-bombs on Japan (e.g. the notorious "reverend" Jeremiah Wright) but suddenly come down with a bad case of laryngitis when it comes to Japanese atrocities against the Koreans, Chinese, Filipinos, or Allied POWs. I think it's a general hypocrisy that excuses anybody who is not perceived as "western" or who is fashionably "third world."

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  8. victor, your explanation sounds spot on: The BBC News has just reported that reports of torture by US troops in Afghanistan 'may trigger terrorism among British Muslims.'

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  9. Victor is right in his insight about the excuses made for Arab violent behavior as actually justifying collective punishment. They accuse Israel of criminally practicing collective punishment ["a war crime"] against Arabs in Judea-Samaria or Gaza. Then they turn around and excuse, for instance, attacks by Muslims in France against Jews there as understandable reactions to what Israel supposedly did, etc etc.

    by the way, since Shasha's family comes from Syria, one wonders if he knows about the Damascus Affair of 1840 when scores of Jews were jailed and tortured [to confess] --four of them dying-- because of the charge of ritually murdering a European priest. It is curious that liberal, Westerners, especially the French consul in Damascus, joined with Muslims and local Christians to persecute the Jews at that time.

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  10. 'The soft bigotry of low expectations' is a good expression to describe western expectations of Arabs and Muslims.
    I don't suppose Shasha hasn't heard of the Damascus affair - he just chooses to ignore it.

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