Torah scrolls in the last surviving synagogue in Baghdad, Meir Tweig in Bataween (photo: Maurice S)
The discovery of the Iraqi-Jewish archive has got Robert Fattal, an Iraqi Jew in Canada, thinking in the Jerusalem Post about what his Iraqi-Jewish heritage means to him. The answer is: not much. He blames his Ashkenazi education, Israel's failure to teach Mizrahi history, the Arabs and Palestinians for 'ethnically cleansing' the Jewish communities of the region, and the Left for whitewashing this crucial fact in its enthusiasm for the 'Zionism-is-imperialism-and-colonialism' paradigm. These are good points, but it is rather unfair of him to assign equal blame to each.
Last month the National Archives in Washington unveiled an
exhibit showcasing Iraqi Jewish artifacts recovered from Saddam Hussein’s
intelligence headquarters.
The controversy surrounding the find and
whether the US should live up to its commitment and return the historic
materials to Iraq has made me reflect on my own identity. Or rather, I should
say, on my lack of any true Iraqi Jewish identity.
My parents, newly
arrived Iraqi Jewish immigrants to Canada, sent me to Jewish school. Like most
Hebrew day schools in North America we were basically taught the Ashkenazi
Zionist worldview. Essentially, that Ashkenazim built and founded the State of
Israel, and that Sephardi Jews generally didn’t contribute very much to Judaic
heritage or Israel. For all intents and purposes, we were made to feel that
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, King David, King Solomon and other biblical figures might
have all hailed from the Levant, but their true descendants came to Israel by
way of Eastern Europe and the Ashkenazi tradition.
Overall, I admit I was
satisfied with the education I received. I became somewhat fluent in Hebrew, and
compared to my parents, whom I would describe as secular and very traditional, I
was definitely more religiously informed than they were. However, being one of
the few if not the only Middle Eastern Jew in my school, I was sporadically
taunted, labeled a camel jockey or worse. Granted, the instances of bullying
were very few and far between, but the ultimate result was that I had a sense of
alienation that I couldn’t really get around.
My parents, content that
other Iraqis had also immigrated to Montreal, hardly felt compelled or rarely
felt welcome getting to know my classmates' families. Looking back, perhaps it
was a combination of my father trying to establish a successful business and my
mother simply trying to help build a safe home that contributed to my segregated
identity.
It goes without saying that today my closest friends are
children of Iraqi immigrants like myself.
It wasn’t until recently that I
began to ask serious questions about my heritage, any remaining legacy, and what
I could potentially pass on to future generations. Sadly, I can’t say I can
contribute very much. I certainly don’t want to sound like I am looking to cast
blame, but it is true that a confluence of three independent interests conspired
to discriminate against me and deny me my heritage.
I’ve already alluded
to the first, Ashkenazim downplaying any Iraqi or Middle Eastern contribution to
Jewish consciousness.
It is well known that Israel’s Ashkenazi leadership
constantly downplayed the history and suffering that Arab Jewish immigrants went
through. It is well documented that the new citizens were discriminated against
when they settled in Israel. To the Ashkenazim, it was as if Arab Jews should
have been thankful to leave their 2,600-year-old traditions for the tents of the
Ma’abarot.
Forgotten refugees; their sole usefulness being to serve as a
bargaining chip to counter Palestinian claims against the State of Israel. Lost
in all these calculations is the fact that today there is no Jewish community in
any Arab country.
Nor is there a movement or desire to promote their
history or traditions. At this point preservation is the best we can hope for.
It is difficult to illustrate this profound loss, however, when I visit the
Wailing Wall on any religious holiday, the plaza is overwhelmed with haredi men
wearing typical Ashkenazi religious attire: three-piece suits with furry black
hats or fedoras. Where are the traditional Mizrahi religious haredim?
It is a
pity that many observant Middle Eastern Jews have adopted the symbols of a
200-year-old tradition over their own, much older ones. I have to ask, which
tradition should the Jews of Israel wish to preserve? Eastern European attire
and customs of the 1800s, or those of a rich, over 2,000-year-old Middle Eastern
Jewish tradition? Witnessing the black suits and furry hats, etc., what many
would consider alien phenomena, is it any wonder that accusations stigmatizing
Israelis as outsiders from Europe gain so much traction? Obviously, Arab
governments themselves were ultimately responsible for the ethnic cleansing of
Jews from their countries, and erasing their history. To this day they refuse to
acknowledge any responsibility or remorse for their actions.
In fact, the
massive exodus depleting the Arab world of its millennial Jewish character is
blamed solely on the victims themselves, and Israel. It was the Arab Jews
themselves, it is argued, that wanted to leave, and for those that preferred to
stay it was Israel that threatened them with violence if they didn’t leave. To
add insult to injury Arab pundits advocate that “Arab countries... offer to take
the Jews back.”
This is a bad joke; one need only witness the exodus of
Christians from the Middle East, and the violence they face if they stay, to
realize this is nothing but a pathetic attempt to whitewash past misdeeds and
culpability. One can only shudder at the fate of any Jews accepting such an
offer.
The Palestinians deserve some of the blame, too. Their political
and religious leadership in the 1930s and 1940s was led by the Mufti of
Jerusalem, Haj Muhammed Amin al-Husseini, who in a fatwa (Islamic religious
ruling) leading up to the “Farhoud” (a 1941 pogrom against the Jews of Iraq)
declared “O Muslims! Proud Iraq has placed herself in the vanguard of this Holy
Struggle.... It is the duty of all Muslims to aid Iraq... and seek every means
to fight the enemy.... Kill the Jews wherever you find them. This pleases Allah,
history and religion. This saves your honor.”
I find this terribly ironic
because had the Mufti counseled the opposite and lobbied for the safety and
retention of the Arab world’s Jews, Israel would have lost a huge boost to its
population. How can Palestinians argue they were helpless, innocent victims when
their leadership was advocating the killing and displacement of Jews from Arab
countries?
Surely, the direct fallout of those actions was the vast immigration
of those same Arab Jewish communities to Israel and settlements in the West
Bank. Iraq, as a potential home, or even a place to visit, is practically gone
for me now. In essence, Israel has remained my last enduring birthright. The
sole remnant of a Middle Eastern tradition that I can call my own. Arab
countries kicked us out, the Palestinians condoned it, and as the last bastion
of Jewish culture in the Middle East, Israel, has become my only ancestral
homeland.
This brings me to the third and last interest group to help
deny my heritage: the political Left. In many ways I am most disappointed with
them. With the Ashkenazim we can create a dialogue and I am sure they would be
open to correcting the mistakes they made with regard to Mizrahi Jews.
In many
ways, the situation vis a vis the Ashkenazi population has already improved
dramatically from the low point of the ‘50s and ‘60s. As for the Arab countries,
well, I don’t think I can expect too much from them. I doubt they will ever
really internalize the damage they did to our culture. I have given up on
them.
The Left is a different story. Politically, I would identify myself
as a progressive hailing from the center-left of the spectrum. I was always, and
still am, sympathetic to the usual left-wing refrain of social justice and
fairness. However, when it comes to anything involving the Middle East the Left
loses its mind and abandons all compassion toward anything relating to
Israel.
As a result, the political left-wing communities have decided to
whitewash the sins of the Arabs. They ignore Arab Jewish history because it
doesn’t fit into the narrative of European Jews usurping the rights and stealing
the land of Palestinians. To them Israel is a colonialist and imperialist
enterprise, period. The victims are the Arabs and the tormentors are the Jews.
The image of Jews fleeing Arab persecution doesn’t really sit well with them, it
just doesn’t compute.
Read article in full
I cannot speak of Robert Fattal's experiences in Canada. However, when I was going to a Jewish school in a large US city, we studied history. Respect was paid to the cultural accomplishments for the Jewish people of the Jews in Babylonia [Iraq] and in Spain. According to the outline of Jewish history of Solomon Grayzel and other historians, Israel was the first center of Jewish culture and religion. In the Roman/Byzantine period, the center moved to Babylonia and then later to Spain. Meanwhile, other centers were important, such as Alexandria in Egypt and northern France/Rhineland in the time of Rashi. It is noteworthy that the Babylonian Talmud was circulated among Jews and became an authority for Jews worldwide. The same later happened with the Biblical and Talmudic commentaries of Rashi which went to Ashkenaz and Sefarad and the Orient.
ReplyDeleteHow can Palestinians argue they were helpless, innocent victims when their leadership was advocating the killing and displacement of Jews from Arab countries?
ReplyDeleteFattal is absolutely correct here. The Arab Higher Committee, the leadership body of the Palestinian Arabs, headed by Amin el-Husseini, was a member of the Arab League and took part in its decisions as to what to do about the Jews in Arab lands in case the UNSCOP partition plan was adopted and recommended by the UN General Assembly. These proposals and plans regarding the Jews in Arab countries were made before Israeli independence on 15 May 1948.
their leadership was advocating the killing and displacement of Jews from Arab countries
ReplyDeleteThis point about advocating the killing of Jews of Arab lands needs elaboration. Haj Amin el-Husseini was in Baghdad from 1938 or 1939 up to 1941. During that time he not only issued a fatwa advocating the killing of Jews [which I admit I was unaware of] but an Iraqi investigating commission set up after the Farhud found that his anti-Jewish agitation and that of his following of Palestinian Arabs who were in Iraq with him, had led to the Farhud. Fattal quotes Husseini as writing in a pre-Farhud fatwa: "Kill the Jews wherever you find them. This pleases Allah, history and religion." These same two sentences were also broadcast by Husseini over Radio Berlin while he was in Germany from 1941 till 1945, enjoying hitler's hospitality and a generous allowance that provided for the upkeep of his entourage of Palestinian Arabs of the leading families and quarters for his offices and his various projects.
While in Germany, the Mufti, Husseini, is reported to have visited Auschwitz and in any case urged Germany and its satellite states [Hungary, Rumania, etc] not to let Jews leave the Nazi-fascist domain in Europe. He urged that Jewish children be sent to Poland where, he wrote, they would be under "active supervision." So Husseini, the chief leader of the Palestinian Arabs in the period from 1921 to circa 1950, was also responsible for the murder of Jewish children in Europe.
Eliyahu, I think you may have a factual point here. Although I don't think it changes the argument that Fattal was trying to make. I Googled the quotation and I found the quotation in article written by Edwin Black who is a Pulitzer Prize nominated author, and wrote a book on Iraqi Jews.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.bankingonbaghdad.com/archive/ReformJudaism2004V33N2/black.shtml
The quotation quotes the Mufti saying this after the Farhud, not before. Fattal, may have made a mistake here. But as far as the point he was trying to make it doesn't change much. The Mufti campaigned to have the Jews of Arab lands thrown out or killed. His intentions and the campaign he led against Jews is unmistakeable.
Fattal's argument is straight forward, the Palestinians weren't innocent victims. Their leadership called for the persecution of Jews, so the outcome of Jews coming to Israel is a natural result of that campaign.