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Restoring Some Honesty Print E-mail
Saturday, 28 June 2008

the_wall.jpgMPACUK Comment: Zionists, as we all know, will sink to any depth but Zionism and Judaism are two separate things. People who care for the Palestinians must never casually mix the two things up. To prove the point (if any were needed), Zionist Lyn Julius’ article has provoked a stern response from Jews who do not share her disgusting views. Here is just one of them that seeks to inject some honesty into the issue rather than the drivel pumped spewed out by JJAC.

Justice for Jews from Arab Countries (JJAC) thinks that Middle Eastern Jews and Palestinian refugees should somehow be offset against each other – the rights of one side counterbalancing the rights of the other. It's a neat argument: Jews were forced to abandon material assets and leave Arab countries; Palestinians similarly fled or were expelled from their homes. Ergo, the region witnessed an exchange of populations and if Palestinian refugees are to be compensated by Israel, so too must the Jewish "refugees" from the Middle East, by the Arab nations that expelled them.

Nice try, but there are many reasons why this formula is all wrong. First off (as David Cesarani points out), it's tasteless. There is no need for the fate of these two peoples, Middle Eastern Jews and Palestinians, to be so fused materialistically. Middle Eastern Jews may indeed have a claim to lost assets, but those genuinely seeking peace between Israel and its neighbours should know that this is not the way to pursue it.

Second, defining Jews from Arab lands as "refugees" is problematic – and many Middle Eastern Jews would be angered by it. Countless Israelis recount leaving former homes in Arab countries and illegally, dangerously migrating prior to 1948. Such experiences do not include a component of expulsion: they left because they wanted to.

Broadly, you could say that any Middle Eastern Jew ("Oriental" or "Mizrahi" Jew) who defines their migration to Israel as "Zionist" cannot also be a refugee: the former label has agency and involves a desire to live in the Jewish state; the second suggests passivity and a lack of choice. Demanding the refugee label to bloc-define this group denies every other scenario: such as that Jews weren't all driven out of the Arab world; that they didn't all want to leave; or that many actually chose to do so.

What's more, if you take the line that Zionism both caused Palestinians to leave their homes and brought Middle Eastern Jews to Israel, then the refugee offset equation is, as the Israeli professor Yehouda Shenhav puts it, a form of "double-entry accounting".

Jewish Agency officials knew that their activities in Palestine could imperil Jews in the Middle East (see the work of Israeli historian Esther Meir-Glitzenste). They chose to carry on with those actions and committed to "rescuing" those Jews if things did take a turn for the worse. If Zionist officials themselves worried about a backlash in the Arab world, how can Israel then be absolved of responsibility for the Jewish exodus from those countries?

But let's get to the heart of the matter. What JJAC seems keen to establish is that Arab countries treated Jewish citizens with contempt and cruelty, fuelled by antisemitism. This formulation perpetuates the myth of Arabs and Jews as polar opposites, destined to be eternal enemies. It shirks the plain fact that Jews lived in Arab counties for over two millennia, for the most part productively and in peace. Even historians like Bernard Lewis say that. Sure, there were hostile periods, but nothing like the waves of anti-Jewish persecution experienced in Europe. The conflict between Arab nations and nascent Israel made it practically untenable for most Jews in the Middle East to stay put – and both sides of the conflict are to blame for that. In other words, Oriental Jews weren't simply "pushed" out of Arab countries; they were also "pulled" towards Israel.

"Pulled" because by the early 1940s Zionist emissaries were operative in the Middle East. They helped set up underground organisations that sought to inspire Jews to migrate to then Palestine.

Scores of Middle Eastern Jews recall that Jewish Agency officials dazzled them with stories of a better life in Israel. Many of them felt betrayed when they set foot in the new Jewish state – and continue to feel that way today.

But Oriental Jews were equally "pushed" out because, often, Arab governments did little to encourage them to stay. For instance, the Iraqi government passed a series of anti-Zionist laws during the 1948 war with Israel, but it didn't properly define Zionism so the laws were wide open to abuse and often experienced as anti-Jewish. The government, a British puppet and under constant threat amidst Iraqi nationalist calls for independence, used the Palestinian issue to deflect attention – sacrificing its Jewish community to this end.

Middle Eastern Jews were stuck between two opposing currents, Zionism and Arab nationalist anti-colonialism – and squeezed out in a pincer manoeuvre.

But this situation at national level did not always sour relations on the ground. Talking to Middle Eastern Jews now in Israel, there are many positive tales about former days in Arab countries: good lives; full rights; friendly Muslim neighbours. These recollections jar with the picture JJAC paints, of a rampant Arab antisemitism during this period.

Of course, we could only focus on the bad and write what the Jewish historian Salo Baron called a "lachrymose" version of events. But what's the point? The Middle Eastern Jewry comprises many threads and, compared with European Jewry, has a distinct history, heritage and culture. This legacy, in all its dimensions, should not be hijacked to fuel further rage and acrimony in the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Source: Comment is free




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Readers have left 6 comments.
RSD: Quote

This is much more balanced than the previously hysterical article. It is nevertheless flawed because it does not place the migration of Mizrachi Jews into the context of the previous 300 years of history. Limiting the envelope of history to a period from about 1880 to 1970 creates distortions. There is also a real danger that unless Mizrachi Jewish voices are heard, rather than pundits from every other group, that their real experiences and perceptions are not understood. There are plenty of websites where Mizrachi Jews do express their opinions and experinces, but sadly this article provides no links to any of them.
As historians like Bernard Lewis would point out the range of experience of Mizrachi Jews is wide, ranging from considerable tolerance to abject oppression and violence. The relationship between Muslims and Jews in the Middle East is close to that of Afro-Americans in the USA.
Despite my apparent criticism of this article it is worthy of praise simply because it represents for MPACUK an acknowledgement of the experiences of the Mizrachim and thus validity of their perspective. It is apity that the author did not have the courage to condemn the governments that failed to protect their Jewish citizens and used the popular emotion to basically rob these people of their property and human rights. It is not enough to condemn Zionists for their actions against the Palestinians and then fail to apply the same rigour to Arab governments and peoples.
(1) 2008-06-30 09:19:11
Paul M: Quote

Why is Lyn Julius castigated as a witch and why are her views deemed 'disgusting'?

She is simply pointing out that close to a million Jews left Arab lands in the years after the creation of the State of Israel, many of them because of explicit racist, anti-Jewish legislation in the countries of their birth and in some cases the outbreak of violence against them.

The idea that 'this is all the fault of the Zionists because they knew their actions would endanger Middle Eastern Jewish communities' is a very weak defence of the ethnic cleansing indulged in by Arab governments.

Bear in mind also that these people were not made refugees in a war situation in which their leaders had threatened to annihilate their neighbours, they were just picked on as innocent citizens whose ancestors had lived in these lands for millenia.

Why does it cause MPAC such offence merely to mention these unfortunates? Is it because whereas tiny, resource-starved Israel took them in and integrated them, the vast and resource-rich Arab world kept the Palestinians rotting in refugee camps?
(2) 2008-06-30 12:04:52
shan: Quote

RSD as usual with his long winded full of hot air comments,comes to his real point hatred of muslims and islam.
He tries so hard to cover up the crimes of jews against the palestinians for the last 60 years byu trying to create oppression were it did not exist.
To say that the relation between jews and muslims is the samne as african and americans by which it should say europeans, is a insult to the tens of millions who lost their lives to the evil that was visited upon them.
The holocaut that the black people had to endure was constant and lasted for centuries,the fact that tens of millions died and tens of millions were taken as beats of burden and work is clear proof of the evil they had to face.
I am now beginning to undestand what led to the holocaust of jews in germany.
(3) 2008-06-30 12:11:00
Rob: Quote

Paulm we also aware that after 1948 when hundreds of thousands of palestinains had been ethnically cleansed,the occupeirs had to make up the numbers to show that israel was needed for jews.

Jews from all over the world were seduced-lured and given money to emigrate to israel,in some nations acts were carried out to create fear and apprehension so that jews would leave those nations.
The fact of the matter that one wishes to enquire about is, if muslims disliked jews living among them, why they decided to act after 1948,what happened that muslims felt like the way they did after 1948.

There may be people who genuinely feared for their lives after 1948,but the question to ask and answer is why.
(4) 2008-06-30 14:05:39
Taz: Quote

At last some truth. Lyn Julius is a lying bi***. Pure Zionist scum. Trying to put yet another obstacle in the peace-process. Get out of Palestine you f****** Zionist sc**!
(5) 2008-06-30 20:33:47
davka: Quote

Taz
I suggest you yourself are an obstacle to the peace process. Name-calling will get you nowhere.
(6) 2008-07-03 12:18:55
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