The Ben Ezra synagogue, Cairo: Egypt would build new ones for returning Jews
It is simply called “the villa”. Its white walls have no markings and an official permit is pending. For its founders, though, the low-key opening of the Arab world’s first new synagogue in generations signals the dawn of a Jewish revival. Standing near the beach-front in Dubai, the synagogue offers Hebrew classes and kosher catering and has just acquired a rabbi. “The promise of our community is the rekindling of a Judeo-Islamic tradition,” says Ross Kriel, president of the new Jewish Council of the Emirates.
That may sound unduly hopeful in the Arab world, which uprooted its 800,000 Jews in the decades after the creation of Israel. But, surprisingly, Arab leaders from Morocco to Iraq are repeating the message. In February Egypt’s president, Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi, said he would build new synagogues if the country’s Jews returned. His government is restoring the Eliyahu Hanavi synagogue in Alexandria, once the Middle East’s largest. It is also cleaning up the vast Jewish cemetery, flooded with sewage, in southern Cairo. And for the second time under Mr Sisi, Egyptian television has scheduled a soap-opera about Jews to run during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan. It tells of a soldier’s steamy affair with a Jewish woman. (...)
After decades of hate speech, cynics deride this
volte face as a publicity stunt by Arab dictators seeking
Western approval. But the Arab spring in 2011 swept away a host of
taboos. People challenged long-standing state ideologies as never
before. From Iraq to Libya, a swathe of politicians, film-makers
and academics, from secular types to the Muslim Brotherhood, have been
re-examining the past, including the post-1948 eviction of Jews.
Released
from the fear of the censors, the internet has enabled Muslims and Jews
to leapfrog borders and passport controls. Virtual communities have
grown online. “I talk to friends in Baghdad
all night,” says an Iraqi Jew in London who left Baghdad in the 1960s.
Last year a popular Arabic Facebook site ran a poll on whether to
restore Iraqi citizenship and the right of return to Jews exiled 70
years ago. Over three-quarters of the 62,000 participants
voted yes. (But this is not the government's view - ed)
Television,
books and student campuses reflect this cultural shift. Arab
documentaries search for Jewish diasporas that once lived in Arab lands.
A new generation of Arab novelists elevates
Jews from bit-players to centre-stage. “I wrote it to show that Jews
are part of our culture,” says Amin Zaoui, the Algerian author of “The
Last Jew of Tamentit”. The Arabic translation of Lucette Lagnado’s “The
Man in the White Sharkskin Suit”, the memoir
of an Egyptian Jew, has had multiple reprints.
Hebrew
departments in Arab universities, once the preserve of would-be spooks,
have mushroomed. Today 13 Egyptian universities teach Hebrew, up from
four in 2004. Some 3,000 Egyptian students
will finish their Hebrew studies this year, double the number five
years ago. Even Syria’s state news agency has a Hebrew website.
For all
this reappraisal, the Arab world today is a far cry from the early
1950s, when Egypt’s first president, Muhammad Naguib, went to synagogue
on Yom Kippur and Muslims prayed next to
Christians and Jews at the graveside of Moses Maimonides, a medieval
rabbi, in Cairo (Maimonides is actually buried in Tiberias. The author may be referring to the Ben Ezra synagogue - ed). From Tlemcen in western Algeria to Qamishli in Syria’s
north-eastern corner, ornate ancient synagogues rot away. “They’ll take
everything when we die,” says one of the last
Jews in Damascus. Under the guise of preserving Jewish heritage, some
outfits backed by Arab governments plan to seize disused property. The
old invective dies hard. “They don’t need a second homeland,” said a
Salafist, after an Algerian minister suggested
reopening the synagogues.
Still,
spikes in tension over Israel no longer spark anti-Jewish pogroms. Some
Palestinian politicians still whip up anti-Jewish feeling, but many
speak Hebrew and have greater awareness and
understanding than before. A surprising number of researchers
uncovering the Middle East’s Jewish past are Palestinian. Some even
speak of a common fate with dispossessed Arab Jews. “We’re entering an
age of post-colonialism,” says a Christian cleric from
Cairo. “We’re again learning how to see richness in others, not
threats.”
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Response by UK Media Watch
More and more Arabs are positive towards Israel
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Response by UK Media Watch

This sounds positive, but one can't help sensing the next step: presenting Palestinian "right of return" as equivalent. But I wonder: would these countries take back Jews if their numbers dwarfed the existing population? And if Jews had a longstanding culture of hostile rhetoric and militancy toward them?
ReplyDeleteHowever genuine this new Arab friendliness, it is but part of a cycle of good times/bad times for Jews in the diaspora that goes back not decades, but millennia. What happens when harsher winds blow against the tiny Jewish minority next generation? For most, the answer is Israel.
In a distant future when humanity is farther along, heterogeneous harmony across the Middle East and beyond will be quite lovely. That day is not here.
DeleteFurthermore, this is the old “man bites dog” type of “news”. Bad journalism favours the sensational over the typical. Thus, they choose to highlight the few and fake “pro-Jewish” statements, rather than the rampant antisemitism throughout the Arab world.