Dr Edy Cohen and Golan Barhoum have been campaigning to raise awareness of the issue of Jews from Arab countries, urging that Jewish refugees to fill in claims forms for lost property. A Knesset lobby group chaired by Levana Zamir who heads the umbrella group representing Jews from Arab countries in Israel, met on 29 July 2015.
It is impossible to quantify how much Jews in Arab countries lost in terms of assets and cash, but Adam Reuter in Ynet News reckons it is 40 percent more than Palestinian losses. Due to the disintegration of Arab states such as Syria, Iraq and Libya, Jews stand their best chance of compensation in Egypt and Morocco (with thanks: Torbjorn).
The government of Iraq (which became an independent
state in the 1950s) even nationalized Jewish businesses and much Jewish
property, allegedly as "compensation" for the Palestinian refugees –
but this money mainly reached the hands of senior government members.
In the early 1960s, Egyptian President Gamal Abdel
Nasser nationalized Jewish property in Egypt, and the same happened to Libya's
Jews. In Syria, Tunisia and Algeria, most Jews fled with only the clothes they
were wearing after the declarations of independence, leaving all their property
behind.
The Jews of Morocco were treated much better, and
were perhaps the only ones who could leave in a relatively organized manner
with their money, but in many other cases they left their homes and businesses
behind.
By the mid 1960s, more than 700,000 Jews had left
the Arab states, most of them immigrating to Israel.
How much Jewish property was left behind?
The estimates regarding the property left by Jews
in Arab states vary from one source to another and are very difficult to
verify, especially as there is a need to conduct a general evaluation of the
real estate left behind in today's prices.
A large
portion of nationalized Jewish real estate was left, for example, in the most
posh neighborhoods of Cairo, Alexandria and Baghdad. The communal property of
Egypt's Jews covered huge areas, including about half of the district of Maadi
(a city of villas and gardens located about 20 kilometers from Cairo, where all
the luxurious houses have turned into the residences of ambassadors from
various countries).
In addition,
there is a need to assess the flow of income from the factories, stores and
businesses that the Arab regimes (or Arab neighbors) gained control of after
the Jews fled, and which remained operational for many years (in rare cases,
some are still operating today). Even the most conservative assessments point
to compensation of billions of dollars, which according to some estimates
reaches $15-20 billion, and much more.
What is are the chances of financial compensation?
One of those trying to collect as much information
and possible and raise an interest among members of the veteran generation and
among the children of the Israeli refugees is Dr. Edy Cohen, an expert in
Middle Eastern affairs and a senior researcher at Bar-Ilan University's
Department of Middle Eastern Studies.
Dr. Cohen,
the son of Jewish refugees who fled Lebanon in the 1980s, managed to collect
information about this aspect of the "nakba" of the Arab state's Jews
as part of his studies. Through the Kedem Forum for Arabic Studies and the
conferences he holds, he is trying to create a buzz regarding the need to try
to get Mizrahi Jews this huge financial debt back.
But the Arab states' current disintegration process
is not helping the chances of actually receiving compensation. Syria no longer
exists as a state, as only 25 percent of the territory is controlled by the
Assad regime and the rest is divided between the Islamic State, Jabhat
al-Nusra, the national rebels and the Kurds.
The situation is similar in Iraq, where almost one-third
of the territory is already controlled by ISIS. Libya has essentially been
divided between a number of large tribes, and the situation in Algeria and
Tunisia isn't promising either.
Of all the countries mentioned so far, the only
relevant ones are Egypt and Morocco, which can allegedly afford to pay
compensation. Morocco, which has a relatively stable economy, may be capable of
paying damages if it has to, but Egypt – which is relying on external donations
right now – won't be able to do so.
An amusing
anecdote is the fact that huge Egyptian bank Misr, which has about 500 branches
in Egypt and in other countries and which is owned by the Egyptian government,
is now claiming ownership of the King David Hotel in Jerusalem. The bank is
demanding compensation for the hotel's shares, which it says were expropriated
by the Israeli Administrator General in as early as 1948. The Egyptians must
have forgotten that the Israeli Administrator General can claim all the assets
of Jewish families in Egypt – and that even after deducting the value of the
King David Hotel, it could be quite a good deal for the State of Israel.
Deduction agreement with the Palestinian property?
In February 2010, the Knesset approved a law
safeguarding Jewish refugees' right for compensation. The law states that
"as part of negotiations for peace in the Middle East, the government will
include the issue of compensating Jewish refugees from Arab states and Iran for
the property they lost, including property which was owned by a Jewish
community in those countries."
According to
one estimate, the lost property of Palestinians who became refugees following
the War of Independence amounts to about 60 percent of the property lost by
Jews expelled from Arab states. In the past decades, ideas have been raised
about different deduction agreements.
It's
possible that following an international agreement, the United States or other
international elements will assume responsibility to financially compensate
both sides as part of a final agreement settling this dispute, but in light of
the shaky economic situation the entire developed world has been facing since
the 2008 crisis, this possibility seems far-fetched at the moment.
Dr. Adam Reuter is the chairman of the Reuter
Meydan Investment House and CEO of Financial Immunities Ltd.
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Egyptian-Jewish family (Courtesy of the family)
Read article in full (Hebrew)
Important info. I note that in Maadi, foreign ambassadors are living in formerly Jewish homes. I think that the list of ambassadors/embassies located on Jewish property should be made public now, with the European countries highlighted because of their outspoken hypocrisy about Israel stealing Arab property, etc.
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