Jews of the Arab World Are Already Home (COMMENTARY MAGAZINE) Jonathan S. Tobin 03/23/12)
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/03/23/jews-arab-world-already-home-foreign-policy/
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Do the descendants of Jews who fled the Arab and Muslim world in 1948
want to “go home?” That’s the odd question asked today by Foreign
Policy magazine in introducing a photo essay featuring images of the
remnants of Jewish life in places like Libya, Iraq and Iran. But
while the photos are interesting, the idea that “the uncertain
revolutions of the past year may present the best chance for long-
exiled Jewish communities across the Middle East to return home” is
probably the most bizarre as well as misleading statements published
on the topic in some time. Not only are Jews not longing to return to
the Arab world, the so-called Arab Spring has unleashed forces of
Islamism that makes such an unlikely occurrence even less inviting
for anyone foolish enough to believe that Jews are welcome there.
For decades one of the most appalling gaps in knowledge of the modern
history of the Middle East is the way even supposedly educated people
ignore the fact that what happened in 1948 was an exchange of
populations. While hundreds of thousands of Arabs fled the area that
would become the State of Israel, hundreds of thousands of Jews were
fled, usually for fear of the lives, from Arab countries where Jews
had lived for more than a millennium. The difference between the two
sets of refugees is that while the Jews were resettled in Israel and
the West, the Arabs were left refused homes elsewhere in the Middle
East and kept in camps where they were told to wait until the Jewish
state was destroyed.
The descendants of those Arab refugees, whose numbers we are amount
to several millions, are still waiting and their demands for
a “return” continues to serve as a standing impediment to the
otherwise dim hopes for peace. Meanwhile the descendants of the Jews
of the Arab and Muslim world have been successfully integrated into
Israeli life. They rightly insist that any compensation to the
descendants of the original Arab refugees should be matched by
payments to the Jews for the property they left behind. These demands
are routinely ignored, as is the entire narrative of Jewish
dispossession.
Rather than the Arab Spring helping to create a situation where
amends might be made for the Jews who were expelled from countries
like Egypt, the rise of Islamist parties there has made the status of
religious minorities even more uncertain. While Jews once thrived in
the Muslim world, albeit under the intermittent threat of persecution
and pogroms, the notion that Jews would be free to live there while
expressing their identity is farcical.
In the first picture in the essay, the magazine notes the example of
David Gerbi who returned to Libya after the fall of Qaddafi hoping to
begin the reclaim a lost synagogue. But they fail to note that he was
arrested and threaten with violence for doing so. In the next photo,
they put forward the claim that Jews live freely in Iran and are not
put out by the anti-Semitic invective that flows from its government.
Here again, the caption fails to note that Iranian Jews are the
subject of frequent persecution and are virtual hostages living under
threat of punishment for speaking freely about their situation. The
magazine’s portrayal is reminiscent of Roger Cohen’s infamous
whitewash of Iran on this subject.
There are some bright spots Foreign Policy can actually point to. One
is Iraq where Hebrew studies have been encouraged. But this is more
the work of the long American presence in the country than any
popular sentiment to welcome home those who were victimized by
pogroms in the 1940s. In Iraqi Kurdistan, there is the chance for
good relations with Israel and the Jews but that only demonstrates
the Kurds’ determination to reject the Islamism that dominates Iran
and some parties in Iraq.
However, the magazine altogether misses the one example of a
successful Jewish community in the Arab world that predates the Arab
spring: Tunisia where the Jews of Djerba have never left.
Unfortunately, the rise of Islamist parties in post-authoritarian
Tunisia makes their stay a bit more precarious.
But the main point to be understood here is that the Jews of the Arab
world are already home. The vast majority of them returned to their
people’s ancient homeland in Israel and have no intention of trading
it for life as Dhimmi — tolerated minorities subject to persecution —
in a Muslim world that is more dominated than ever by the forces of
intolerance that were unleashed in last year’s revolutions.
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