South Florida has a growing community of Sephardi and Mizrahi Jews fleeing antisemitism, some for the second or third time. Lior Haiat and Henry Green explain in the Miami Herald why the forgotten refugees from the Middle East and North Africa must be part of the equation in any peace negotiations (with thanks:Michelle): 
 Miami beach has a growing Mizrahi community
For centuries Jews co-existed for 
the most part peacefully with their various neighbors across North 
Africa and the Middle East. Jewish communities thrived from the Atlantic
 Ocean to the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, from Casablanca to Alexandria
 and Baghdad.
Today, they all 
have been virtually driven to extinction. Within one generation, from 
1948 to 1973, nearly 1 million people were displaced, many becoming 
refugees.
In the wake of the 
Holocaust, the establishment of the state of Israel and the rise of Arab
 nationalism, the Sephardi/Mizrahi Jews in North Africa and the Middle 
East were increasingly subjected to pogroms, riots, arrest and 
detention. They were caught between the colonizers and the colonized. 
But unlike other ethnic groups, the Jews was viewed as a “fifth column.” 
 Jews were stripped of their citizenship, belongings and livelihoods. 
Communal life was restricted, schools and synagogues confiscated and 
cemeteries destroyed for urban renewal. In 1969, during the regime of 
Saddam Hussein, innocent Jews were scapegoated as Israeli spies and 
hanged in a public square.
Nearly
 half of those displaced migrated to Israel, about a quarter to Europe 
and the rest to the Americas. Many experienced several exiles. For 
example, the Garazi family, fearing rising anti-Jewish sympathies in the
 wake of the fall of the Ottoman Empire, traveled from Aleppo to Havana 
and then to Miami post-Castro in 1961. When Solomon was asked if his 
roots still played a significant role in his life he said: “It is who I 
am: a proud Jew from Aleppo who left his heart in Havana to go into 
exile again to be free so I could continue to cultivate my Sephardi 
heritage”.
The Diaine family 
fled Algiers in the face of the Algerian Revolution in 1962 and migrated
 to Paris, only to leave for Miami in fear of the growing anti-Semitism 
before the Charlie Hebdo massacre. “The feeling is there’s something 
wrong going on in Europe,” Elisa Diaine said. “The extreme right is 
rising and, unfortunately, the first to be scapegoats are always the 
Jews.”
Today, South Florida is 
home to thousands of Sephardi and Mizrahi Jews of Middle Eastern and 
North African heritage. It is a melting pot of communities and 
multiculturalism, a haven for refugees of all nations and ethnicities. 
The
 story of the “forgotten exodus,” Jewish refugees from Arab and Muslim 
countries, has never been part of the discussion regarding 
Palestinian-Israeli and Arab-Israeli encounters for peace. With each 
attempt to rewrite history, the voices of these Jewish refugees grow 
weaker, as witnesses pass on and human-rights agencies exclude them from
 the equation of justice. 

That opening about co-exiisting peacefully for the most part is one of the myths that Arab and Leftistist allies routinely haul out. My investigation into the history of Jews in the Magreb and Middle East tells a very different story of routine discrimination, humiliation and massacre. One could say that in-between the Pogroms and the Holocaust Jews in Europe co existed peacefully with their neighbors.
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ReplyDeleteBnai Brith Canada publishes on line a series on Jews in Arab lands and their persecution and expulsion:
http://www.bnaibrith.ca/b_nai_brith_canada_launches_series_in_tribute_to_jews_from_arab_lands