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Jews
in Arab Countries |
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1948 |
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Now |
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Algeria |
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140,000 |
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0 |
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Egypt |
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75,000 |
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100 |
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Iraq |
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135,000 |
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100 |
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Lebanon |
|
5,000 |
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100 |
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Libya |
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38,000 |
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0 |
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Morocco |
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265,000 |
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5,700 |
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Sryia |
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30,000 |
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100 |
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Tusnia |
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105,000 |
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1,500 |
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Yemen |
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55,000 |
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200 |
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The Forgotten Refugees
Why does nobody care about the Jewish refugees
from Arab lands?
The world is greatly concerned about
the Arabs who fled the nascent state of Israel in 1948. But no mention
is ever made of the Jewish refugees from Arab lands. Their history is
as compelling and arguably more so than that of the Arab refugees from
Israel.
What are the facts?
Jews in Arab countries. Jews have lived
since Biblical times in what are now Arab countries. After the Roman conquest,
Jews were dispersed, mostly to what are now the Arab countries of North
Africa and the Middle East. Many Jews migrated to the Iberian peninsula
– Spain and Portugal. They were expelled from those countries at
the end of the 15th century. They mostly migrated to the Arab countries,
where, by now, they have been living for almost 500 years, many Jews for
over 2,000 years.
There is a myth that Jews had an easy life in Muslim/Arab
countries. The opposite is the case. Jews under Islam were treated as
second-class citizens and worse. The relationship was governed by a system
of discrimination, intended to reduce the Jews in those Arab countries
to conditions of humiliation, segregation and violence. They were excluded
from society, from government, and from most professions. They were barely
tolerated and often, under the slightest pretext or no pretext at all,
were victimized by vicious violence.
When Israel declared its statehood in 1948, pogroms broke
out across the entire Arab/Muslim world. Thousands died in this violence.
Their homes and businesses were destroyed, their women violated. The vast
majority of those Jews fled from where they had lived for centuries. They
had to leave everything behind. Most of those who were able to escape
found their way to the just-created state of Israel.
Over 850,000 Jews were driven from Arab countries, most
of them in 1948, at the birth of Israel. Most of the remainder were chased
out during or immediately following the Six-Day War in 1967, when, in
fury about the disastrous defeat, the “Arab street” erupted
and subjected its Jewish population to bloody pogroms. Israel received
every one of those Jewish refugees from Arab countries with brotherly
open arms; it housed, fed, and quickly integrated them into Israeli society.
They and their descendants now make up more than one-half of the country’s
population.
A different history. It is instructive
to compare the history of those Jewish refugees with that of the Arabs
who fled from Israel during its War of Independence. There were about
650,000 of them. Most left following the strident invocations of their
leaders, who urged them to leave, so as to make room for the invading
Arab armies. After victory was to be achieved, they could return to reclaim
their property and that of the Jews, all of whom would have been killed
or would have fled.
In contrast to the Jewish refugees, who were quickly integrated
into Israel, the Arab countries resolutely refused to accept the Arab
refugees into their societies. They confined them into so-called refugee
camps. Those camps are essentially extended slum cities, where their descendants
– now the fourth generation – have been living ever since.
The reason for the Arabs’ refusal to accept them was and still is
the desire to keep them as a festering sore and to make solution of the
Arab/Israel conflict impossible. These “refugees,” whose number
has by now miraculously increased from their original 650,000 to 5 million,
are seething with hatred toward Israel and provide the cadres of terrorists
and suicide bombers.
The Palestinian refugees occupy a unique place in the concern
of the world. Since 1947, there have been over 100 UN resolutions concerning
the Palestinian refugees. But there has not been one single resolution
addressing the horrible injustices done to the nearly one million Jewish
refugees from the Arab states.
There have been many millions of refugees in the wake of
the Second World War. With only one exception, none of those refugee groups
occupy the interest of the world and of the United Nations in a major
way. That one exception are the Palestinian refugees. In fact, a special
branch of the United Nations (UNRWA) exists only for the maintenance of
those “refugees.” In the over sixty years of the existence
of this agency it has cost many billions of dollars, most of it –
you guessed it – contributed by the United States.
Jewish refugees from the Arab countries are the forgotten
refugees. The world, and especially of course the Arabs, claim compensation
from Israel for the Arab refugees and insist on their return to what has
been Israel for over 60 years. The Jewish refugees from Arab countries,
all Israelis now, have no desire to return to their ancient homelands,
where they had been treated so shabbily and so brutally. But if there
is to be any compensation, those forgotten Jewish refugees are certainly
entitled to such compensation as much as the Arab refugees. Anything else
would be an outrage and a great injustice.
This ad has been published and paid
for by
Facts and Logic About the Middle East
P.O. Box 590359
San Francisco, CA 94159
Gerardo Joffe, President
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