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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Appropriately enough, given yesterday's post concerning Jews from Arab countries testifying before the UN, our friend Lee Smith has an interesting piece with the "dean of Arabic studies in Israel," Sasson Somekh, born in Baghdad, 1934: City of Dreams

...1941 was a real massacre, it was horrible. The Mufti of Jerusalem, Hajj Amin al-Husseini, had come to Baghdad that year and lived not far from us; I used to see him and his men. He incited everyone against the Jews of Baghdad, who were not Zionists. He would appear on radio--"you Jews are snakes," etcetera--and the simple people believed him. There were lots of Palestinians who had come to teach in Iraq, we needed so many teachers, and these were often under the guidance of the Mufti and his men, and this poisoned the atmosphere further. So, in 1941 there were 100,000 Jews in Baghdad and possibly 20,000 whose houses were attacked. But during the war, the British brought prosperity and the Jewish community forgot about that pogrom. That started to change in 1948 because of tensions over the war in Palestine when soldiers came back angry at Jews. With these new tensions in the air, the Jews remembered those days of the farhoud. The pro-Nazi party, al-Istiqlal (Independence) hinted at another farhoud, saying the Jews should get out before it happened to them again. It was not their official policy, but we heard it.

The real turning point was in 1948 with the hanging of Shafiq Adas, a rich Jew who was a friend of the Prince Regent. He was hanged in Basra, accused of buying scrap from the British and sending it to Israel. So Jews started to leave and the Muslims who were partners with Jews before were scared now, and a good life for the Jews was no more in the offing. Most of our neighbors were leaving and selling their property. My parents were not crazy about the idea of moving to Israel. My father was fifty and didn't like the idea of such an adventure...

Tough times, he made good -- though the glorious Jewish community of Baghdad is just a remnant.

2 Comments

It's because of stories like this that I waste no tears for Iraqis.

Intriguing; born in 1934, contemporary of al Husseini and knowledgeable of the pivotal role the latter played in history in the M.E., apparently an Arab Jew - as judged by one of his covers at Amazon (Baghdad, Yesterday: The Making of an Arab Jew) - and a renown scholar who receives substantial editorial reviews.

Book bought.

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