Nadene Goldfoot
"June 17, 2020 was Jewish Refugees Day, when we remembered the fate of 850,000 Jewish refugees forced out of Arab countries and Iran in the 20th century. Communities dating back 2,500 years were destroyed.
At the United Nations, UN Watch's Hillel Neuer asked Algeria, Egypt, Iraq and the others: “Where are your Jews?”
A Synagogue on Jerba, off Tunisia
Inside a Tunisia synagogue
With the Palestinians demanding half of what was left of our Jewish Homeland, promised at the end of WWII, we should remember that the Jews of these places were forced out by the Arab countries because of Israel, tiny that is was, was created after 2,000 patient years of waiting. Jews had gone there to live after being forced out of their own country by the Romans.
Great Synagogue of TunisJewish Algerian family
Algeria's Jews had lived there before 70 CE, and possibly were there with the Carthaginians who came here with them. Carthaginians settled in today's Tunisia, shown above in purple between Algeria and Libya. A settlement was founded in Carthage by Phoenicians in N. Africa, possibly the biblical Tarshish, in 200 CE, but were then already long-established in the area. The Jewish cemetery of the Roman Period had 3,000 tombs in Carthage, , a seaside suburb of Tunisia’s capital, Tunis, which is known for its ancient archaeological sites. Founded by the Phoenicians in the first millennium B.C.E, it was once the seat of the powerful Carthaginian (Punic) Empire, which fell to Rome in the 2nd century B.C.E Today it retains a scattered collection of ancient baths, theaters, villas and other ruins, many with sweeping views of the Gulf of Tunis. Jewish proselytization was apparently active in the 3rd and 4th centuries. The community declined due to persecution after the conquest by Justinian, the Byzantine emperor (527-65) in 535. The Talmud mentions various scholars from Carthage. Some Berber tribes had converted to Judaism. When the Roman Empire became Christian, Jews suffered.
Spain's 1492 decree against Jews caused many to flee to Algeria. It became the center of Sephardi life and produced some notable scholars. In the 16th century under Turkish rule, Jews were treated well. By 1804, mob violence attacked Jews. French occupation in 1830 gave the land new spirit and by 1870 the Cremieux Decree conferred French citizenship to Jews. With Moslems now there, violent anti-Jewish outbreaks happened in the late 1800s. France fell in 1940 in WWII and the Vichy government introduced anti-Semitic laws, and Germans occupied the land from 1942-3 and of course Jews suffered.
In the 20th century, Iraqi Jews played an important role in the early days of Iraq's independence. Between 1950 and 1952, 120,000–130,000 of the Iraqi Jewish community (around 75%) reached Israel in Operation Ezra and Nehemiah.
The religious and cultural traditions of Iraqi Jews are kept alive today in strong communities established by Iraqi Jews in Israel, especially in Or Yehuda, Givatayim and Kiryat Gat. According to government data as of 2014, there were 227,900 Jews of Iraqi descent in Israel, with other estimates as high as 600,000 Israelis having some Iraqi ancestry. Smaller communities upholding Iraqi Jewish traditions in the Jewish diaspora exist in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, Singapore, Canada, and the United States.
THE ATTACKS against the Jews in Arab lands occurred even before the establishment of the State of Israel. In Iraq they began with discrimination in the areas of the economy, education and public life. Afterwards, Arab nationalism ignited the fires of rioting against the Jews, which came to a peak in the farhud of 1941.
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