Point of No Return: Jewish Refugees from Arab Countries
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
One-stop blog on Jews from Arab and Muslim Countries and the Middle East's forgotten Jewish refugees, updated daily
Introduction
In just 50 years, almost a million Jews, whose communities stretch back up to 3,000 years, have been 'ethnically cleansed' from 10 Arab countries. These refugees outnumber the Palestinian refugees two to one, but their narrative has all but been ignored. Unlike Palestinian refugees, they fled not war, but systematic persecution. Seen in this light, Israel, where over 50 percent of the Jewish population descend from these refugees and are now full citizens, is the legitimate expression of the self-determination of an oppressed indigenous, Middle Eastern people.
This website is dedicated to preserving the memory of the near-extinct Jewish communities, which can never return to what and where they once were - even if they wanted to. It will attempt to pass on the stories of the Jewish refugees and their current struggle for recognition and restitution. Awareness of the injustice done to these Jews can only advance the cause of peace and reconciliation.
(Iran: once an ally of Israel, the Islamic Republic of Iran is now an implacable enemy and numbers of Iranian Jews have fallen drastically from 80,000 to 20,000 since the 1979 Islamic revolution. Their plight - and that of all other communities threatened by Islamism - does therefore fall within the scope of this blog.)
Deportation of a million Jews from Arab countries remembered in Dec. 3 program
By AARON HOWARD | JHV•
Thu, Nov 30, 2017
|
The displacement of some 990,000 Jewish families from Arab countries is a relatively unknown story. Although Jews lived in the Middle East and North Africa prior to the time of Mohammad, today, Jews have disappeared completely from most of the Arab nations.
The forced expulsion of Arab Jewry dates from 1948. The timetable and details differ in each country. Yet, certain commonalities were experienced by all Jewish communities: the rise of a virulent Arab nationalism, in response to the establishment of the State of Israel; economic and political measures aimed specifically at disenfranchising Jews; pogroms, in which Jews were murdered, synagogues burned and property looted; and Jews forced to flee, leaving all their possessions behind.
On Dec. 3, Congregation Beth Rambam, in cooperation with the Consulate General of Israel to the Southwest and the Israeli American Council, Houston, will present a program to remember the exit and deportation of Jews from Arab countries and Iran. The program begins at 6:45 p.m., with the opening of the exhibition, “The Jewish Refugees from Arab Countries.” Rabbi Daniel Masri and Israeli Consul General Gilad Katz will speak at 7:30, followed by the screening of the documentary film, “The Forgotten Refugees.” The program will take place at Beth Rambam, 11333 Braesridge Dr.
For Houstonian Eli Sasson, the deportation is personal. Sasson and his family lived in Tripoli. They were among the nearly 40,000 Jews who lived in Libya in 1948. Today, no Jews live in Libya.
“From what I learned from my family history, my ancestors came to Libya from Spain,” Sasson told the JHV during an interview in his flood-damaged Willowbend home.
“My father owned a building that had a wine factory on the first floor. We lived above the factory. My uncles ran a hardware store and dealt in real estate. My grandfather from my mother’s side owned a granite factory. They cut granite for tabletops and other things. They imported the stone from Italy. It was a prosperous family.
“We had a good relationship with the Arabs for years until 1945.”
Then, following rumors that Jews had killed Arabs praying at the al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, Arab mobs attacked the Jews in Tripoli. Some 140 Jews were killed. Rioters looted nearly all of Tripoli’s 44 synagogues, along with hundreds of homes and businesses.
“My grandmother from my father’s side had 10 boys,” said Sasson. “All of them were able to run out from the riots. My grandmother didn’t leave her home. When her boys came back, they saw her head had been chopped off.”
Years later, Sasson’s mother told him that during the pogroms, her mother and she were hiding under a table in their house, hoping the mob would not break their door down. She related the only reason why the mob didn’t burst through the door was one of the rioters worked for her father. She heard the man through the window tell the mob, ‘Leave them! This is the Sasson house.’ The mob continued on to the next house.
“Before the pogroms, life in Libya was good,” said Sasson. “At home, our family spoke a Jewish Arabic. I can speak my parents’ Arabic. but I cannot communicate with Palestinians who speak Arabic. It’s not the same Arabic. My father would write letters in Jewish Arabic. using Hebrew writing. I think the language has disappeared.
“After 1945, my father continued living in Tripoli. He believed the worst had passed and nobody knew that Israel would become a state. Even if they had wanted to leave, they had no place to go.
“In 1948, the Jewish Agency sent representatives to Libya. They called the heads of the community to the synagogues and told them: ‘Now you can go and send your kids to Israel.’ The Jewish Agency sent a ship and told the community that whoever wanted a one-way ticket to Israel, passage was free. Many of the parents were afraid to send their kids. But, two or three of the older boys in my family ran away to the ship without their parents’ permission.”
As a boy, Sasson witnessed the Arab mobs in the street from the balcony of his house. They were chanting “Kill the Jews.”
Between 1948-’51, some three-quarters of the 40,000 Libyan Jewish community left the country. Sasson, then age 6, and part of his family got out.
The period saw an explosion of Arab nationalism. By Dec. 24, 1951, when King Idris I proclaimed the independence of the United Kingdom of Libya as a sovereign state, Arab nationalism exercised a powerful influence, particularly among the younger generation. The brand of pan-Arab nationalism propounded by Egypt›s Gamal Abdul Nasser after 1952, was based on the goals of bringing down Western-backed governments and the liberation of Palestine. Nasser argued Israel was not founded to provide a homeland for Jews but for the creation and maintenance of a colonial structure in the heart of the Middle East.
In Libya, as nationalism increased, so did intolerance of the remaining Jewish community. The government closed Jewish schools. In 1953, Jews became victims of economic boycotts. The Maccabi sports club was forcibly opened to Arab members in 1954.
In 1957, a law was passed requiring Libyans, with relatives in Israel, to register at the Libyan boycott office. In 1958, Tripoli’s Jewish community ceased to be an independent entity. The community now was to be administered by a state-appointed commissioner.
Legal exclusion increased. In 1960, Jews were prohibited from acquiring new possessions, to vote, to hold public office or to serve in the army or the police.
And, things worsened after 1967. Libyan Jews were accused of being responsible, along with Israel, for the war that the Arab states lost.
“As a result of the Six-Day War, the Arabs felt humiliated by the enormity of the Israeli victory,” said Sasson. “After the pogroms that took 18 lives, the Libyan Jewish community was ordered to leave the country. All you could bring out with you was one suitcase and 25 pounds in currency. The community left everything.
“My father owned the building where the factory was located and where we lived. He owned rental properties. I don’t hear people talking about all the property that my father and other Libyan Jews were forced to give up.
“Most people don’t know about this history. Jews were forced out of countries all over the Arab world. I tell stories to my grandkids who are 10, 7 and 5. They need to appreciate every moment they can live in a free society. Here, they can go to school. They can have protection. This is not given to every child in the world. But, I don’t think I can relate to them the background of my grandfathers. It’s so different.”
Sasson often encounters Palestinians in Houston. When they talk politics, he explains that he is a refugee from Libya. The difference is that he doesn’t let the past totally define his future.
“My attitude is instead of crying that you took something from me, let’s create something new,” said Sasson. “Let’s get out of the history of hate. I tell this to all the Palestinians I speak with here in the States.”
* * *
To attend the program at Beth Rambam, RSVP to rsvpisraelsw@gmail.com.
Justice for Jews from Arab Countries
Jews Indigenous to the Middle East and North Africa
World Organisation of Jews from Arab Countries
HARIF:Association of Jews from the Middle East and N. Africa (UK)
Sephardi Voices Oral History project(UK)
DIARNA: mapping Mizrahi heritage
Alliance Israelite Universelle (Kiach)
Babylonian Heritage Centre
Iraqi Jews who left in the 60s and 70s
Sketches of old Baghdad
The Daily Sage
Shaar Binyamin - Traditions of Damascus Jews
Website of Saul Silas Fathi
Lyn Julius' blog at the Times of Israel
Lyn Julius' blog at Huffington Post
Clash of Cultures - Harif's Jpost blog
The Jews of Libya (Hebrew)
The Jews of Lebanon
Forgotten Jews (of Libya)
Hamos Guetta's Italia Ebraica (including Jews of Libya)
International Association of Jews from Egypt
Historical Society of the Jews from Egypt
Nebi Daniel Association (Egypt)
Harissa Jews of Tunisia
Dafina Jews of Morocco
Zlabia Jews of Algeria
Yemenite Jewish Heritage House
Institut Sepharade Europeen
Out of Spain
Sephardic Pizmonim Project
Yahoodi 1 Arabic website
Property claims and registration forms
Guide to the Peace Process: Jewish Refugees from Arab Countries (Israel MFA)
Jewish refugees from Arab Countries: the Case for Rights and Redress (JJAC)
Jewish and Arab refugees:rhetoric and reality by Sidney Zabludoff
And the world is lying - the plight of refugees by Ben Dror Yemini
Why Jews fled Arab Countries by Yaakov Meron
A tragedy shrouded in silence: the destruction of the Arab World's Jewry by Adi Schwartz
Arab and Jewish Refugees: the Contrast (Myths and Facts) by Eli Hertz
A different story of displacement and loss by Matti Friedman
Mizrahi Nation by Matti Friedman
Letter from a Forgotten Jew, by David Harris
Why Jews from Arab Countries are central to combating anti-Zionism by David Matas
Arabism not Zionism caused the Jewish exodus by S. Trigano
How Arabs stole Jewish property (By Tani Goldstein)
Expelled Jews hold deeds for five times Israel's size
Were Jews from Arab countries all refugees?
Frequently Asked Questions
Jewish Virtual Library Fact Sheet
How much did the Jews lose?
Seven myths about Jews from Arab lands
Arab League Draft Law regarding Jews
Congress adopts first ever Jewish refugees bill
Jewish refugee bill introduced in Knesset
Knesset to confirm 30 November as Jewish Refugees Memorial Day
Massacres of Jews by Muslims before 1948
Who is an Arab Jew? By Albert Memmi
JIMENA Bibliography
What were Arab-Jewish relations really like?
Let's reframe the Israel debate (Lyn Julius)
The myth of Jewish colonialism
How coexistence projects can hinder peace
Why leftists and Arabs ignore Mizrahi rights (Loolwa Khazoom)
Rachel Shabi's Mizrahi Post-Zionism: a Critique (Lyn Julius)
Has Hitch heard of Jews from Arab lands?
Publicising Jews 'nakba' can lead to 'sulha'
Exodus of refugees: an overview
Anti-Jewish laws and practices
That's my house in Egypt you're living in
Dhimmi denial
The Arab states' original sin
How complicit were Arabs with Nazism?
Israel’s secret Kabyl allies
In search of righteous Arabs
Post-Zionism and the Sephardi question
Giving the lie to the big lie
Arabs without Jews:roots of a tragedy
Oriental Zionism of Arab-born Jews
Who is an Arab Jew? By Albert Memmi
The illusion of Palestinian return
Babylon...and on
JIMENA Bibliography
Exodus of refugees: an overview
Dhimmi denial
All you wanted to know about Muslim antisemitism
Anti-Jewish laws and practices
An Egyptian Jew's story
Denationalisation of Jews in Egypt
My house is your house: Egyptian Jews'rights denied
Jews of Yemen: countdown to extinction
How Syria and Lebanon became emptied of Jews
The saviour of Syrian Jewry
How Morocco's Jews became shadows
Jews of Yemen: countdown to extinction
Decline and fall of Libyan Jewry
Libyan Jew speaks out
Jewish refugee addresses UN
Baghdad once as Jewish as NY
Timeline to disaster for Jews of Iraq
Muslims threw 1951 Baghdad bomb
The exchange of populations
Paradise lost: Iraqi family's story
Jews are also an Arab question
My return to Morocco
My right of return - by a Tunisian Jew
The truth about the Jews of Iran
Is it all over for the Jews of Turkey?
Will there be Jews in Palestine?
Jewish ownership in 'Arab' areas
Google News
IsraPundit
Normblog
Anglican Friends of Israel
Blue Truth
Christians standing with Israel
Christians s. with Israel Blog
Emet News
Irene Lancaster
Zio Nation Progressive Zionism
Israel News
Middle East analysis
Zionism and Israel info Centre
Zionism-Israel Pages
Israel-Palestina(Dutch/Eng)
Israel-Palestinian News Blog(Dutch)
IMO Blog
The Jerusalem Post
MidEast Youth
Neo-neocon
Dry Bones
Democracy for the Middle East
Babylon and Beyond
MEMRI
Solomonia
Reut R. Cohen
Urban Infidel
Iranian American Jews
Highest infidelity
Israeli Law Forum
Life through my eyes
Emet mi'Tziyon
Women's lens
The TygrrrrExpress
Image Sephardic magazine
Jeff Weintraub
Z-word Blog at The Propagandist
Alain Bidjerano
Israellycool
Harry's Place
Tom Gross
Meretz USA
Jewish Issues Watchdog
Magdeburger Joe
Rogntudjuu (Swedish)
Mark Halawa
Comment is Free Watch
JHate
Yaacov Lozowick's Ruminations
Elder of Ziyon
Roya's Israel blog (Farsi)
International Unity for Equality
The forced expulsion of Arab Jewry dates from 1948. The timetable and details differ in each country. Yet, certain commonalities were experienced by all Jewish communities: the rise of a virulent Arab nationalism, in response to the establishment of the State of Israel; economic and political measures aimed specifically at disenfranchising Jews; pogroms, in which Jews were murdered, synagogues burned and property looted; and Jews forced to flee, leaving all their possessions behind.
On Dec. 3, Congregation Beth Rambam, in cooperation with the Consulate General of Israel to the Southwest and the Israeli American Council, Houston, will present a program to remember the exit and deportation of Jews from Arab countries and Iran. The program begins at 6:45 p.m., with the opening of the exhibition, “The Jewish Refugees from Arab Countries.” Rabbi Daniel Masri and Israeli Consul General Gilad Katz will speak at 7:30, followed by the screening of the documentary film, “The Forgotten Refugees.” The program will take place at Beth Rambam, 11333 Braesridge Dr.
For Houstonian Eli Sasson, the deportation is personal. Sasson and his family lived in Tripoli. They were among the nearly 40,000 Jews who lived in Libya in 1948. Today, no Jews live in Libya.
“From what I learned from my family history, my ancestors came to Libya from Spain,” Sasson told the JHV during an interview in his flood-damaged Willowbend home.
“My father owned a building that had a wine factory on the first floor. We lived above the factory. My uncles ran a hardware store and dealt in real estate. My grandfather from my mother’s side owned a granite factory. They cut granite for tabletops and other things. They imported the stone from Italy. It was a prosperous family.
“We had a good relationship with the Arabs for years until 1945.”
Then, following rumors that Jews had killed Arabs praying at the al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, Arab mobs attacked the Jews in Tripoli. Some 140 Jews were killed. Rioters looted nearly all of Tripoli’s 44 synagogues, along with hundreds of homes and businesses.
“My grandmother from my father’s side had 10 boys,” said Sasson. “All of them were able to run out from the riots. My grandmother didn’t leave her home. When her boys came back, they saw her head had been chopped off.”
Years later, Sasson’s mother told him that during the pogroms, her mother and she were hiding under a table in their house, hoping the mob would not break their door down. She related the only reason why the mob didn’t burst through the door was one of the rioters worked for her father. She heard the man through the window tell the mob, ‘Leave them! This is the Sasson house.’ The mob continued on to the next house.
“Before the pogroms, life in Libya was good,” said Sasson. “At home, our family spoke a Jewish Arabic. I can speak my parents’ Arabic. but I cannot communicate with Palestinians who speak Arabic. It’s not the same Arabic. My father would write letters in Jewish Arabic. using Hebrew writing. I think the language has disappeared.
“After 1945, my father continued living in Tripoli. He believed the worst had passed and nobody knew that Israel would become a state. Even if they had wanted to leave, they had no place to go.
“In 1948, the Jewish Agency sent representatives to Libya. They called the heads of the community to the synagogues and told them: ‘Now you can go and send your kids to Israel.’ The Jewish Agency sent a ship and told the community that whoever wanted a one-way ticket to Israel, passage was free. Many of the parents were afraid to send their kids. But, two or three of the older boys in my family ran away to the ship without their parents’ permission.”
As a boy, Sasson witnessed the Arab mobs in the street from the balcony of his house. They were chanting “Kill the Jews.”
Between 1948-’51, some three-quarters of the 40,000 Libyan Jewish community left the country. Sasson, then age 6, and part of his family got out.
The period saw an explosion of Arab nationalism. By Dec. 24, 1951, when King Idris I proclaimed the independence of the United Kingdom of Libya as a sovereign state, Arab nationalism exercised a powerful influence, particularly among the younger generation. The brand of pan-Arab nationalism propounded by Egypt›s Gamal Abdul Nasser after 1952, was based on the goals of bringing down Western-backed governments and the liberation of Palestine. Nasser argued Israel was not founded to provide a homeland for Jews but for the creation and maintenance of a colonial structure in the heart of the Middle East.
In Libya, as nationalism increased, so did intolerance of the remaining Jewish community. The government closed Jewish schools. In 1953, Jews became victims of economic boycotts. The Maccabi sports club was forcibly opened to Arab members in 1954.
In 1957, a law was passed requiring Libyans, with relatives in Israel, to register at the Libyan boycott office. In 1958, Tripoli’s Jewish community ceased to be an independent entity. The community now was to be administered by a state-appointed commissioner.
Legal exclusion increased. In 1960, Jews were prohibited from acquiring new possessions, to vote, to hold public office or to serve in the army or the police.
And, things worsened after 1967. Libyan Jews were accused of being responsible, along with Israel, for the war that the Arab states lost.
“As a result of the Six-Day War, the Arabs felt humiliated by the enormity of the Israeli victory,” said Sasson. “After the pogroms that took 18 lives, the Libyan Jewish community was ordered to leave the country. All you could bring out with you was one suitcase and 25 pounds in currency. The community left everything.
“My father owned the building where the factory was located and where we lived. He owned rental properties. I don’t hear people talking about all the property that my father and other Libyan Jews were forced to give up.
“Most people don’t know about this history. Jews were forced out of countries all over the Arab world. I tell stories to my grandkids who are 10, 7 and 5. They need to appreciate every moment they can live in a free society. Here, they can go to school. They can have protection. This is not given to every child in the world. But, I don’t think I can relate to them the background of my grandfathers. It’s so different.”
Sasson often encounters Palestinians in Houston. When they talk politics, he explains that he is a refugee from Libya. The difference is that he doesn’t let the past totally define his future.
“My attitude is instead of crying that you took something from me, let’s create something new,” said Sasson. “Let’s get out of the history of hate. I tell this to all the Palestinians I speak with here in the States.”
* * *
To attend the program at Beth Rambam, RSVP to rsvpisraelsw@gmail.com.
Sephardi/Mizrahi websites
Labels
- 'Golden Age' Spain (23)
- Alliance Israelite Universelle (13)
- Antisemitism (498)
- Antisemitsm (1)
- Arab-Jewish relations (250)
- Arab-Jewish relations/ Six-Day War (66)
- British campaign (2)
- Dhimmitude (175)
- Egypt/Israel (45)
- Egyptian Israelis (6)
- French Israelis (1)
- Holocaust in Arab and Muslim lands (299)
- Holocaust in Arab lands (30)
- Holy sites (185)
- Indigenous Jews (72)
- Iran/Israel (22)
- Iranian Jews in Israel (24)
- Iranian Jews in US (49)
- Iraq/Israel (68)
- Islamism (179)
- Israel campaign (218)
- Israel/Egypt (9)
- Israel/Libya (13)
- Israel/Syria (2)
- Israel/Tunisia (28)
- Jewish archives (149)
- Jewish refugees (439)
- Jewish refugees in Palestine (73)
- Jewish refugees/ Egypt (44)
- Jewish refugees/ media bias (60)
- Jewish refugees/ Palestinians(275)
- Jewish refugees/ US campaign (4)
- Jewish refugees/Algeria (3)
- Jewish refugees/Canada campaign(22)
- Jewish refugees/Egypt (16)
- Jewish refugees/Iran (4)
- Jewish refugees/Iraq (36)
- Jewish refugees/Lebanon (1)
- Jewish refugees/Libya (35)
- Jewish refugees/Palestinians (67)
- Jewish refugees/Syria (4)
- Jewish refugees/Tunisia (2)
- Jews of Afghanistan (23)
- Jews of Algeria (90)
- Jews of Arabia (3)
- Jews of Bahrain (33)
- Jews of Bangladesh (2)
- Jews of Burma (6)
- Jews of China (4)
- Jews of Egypt (421)
- Jews of Eritrea (1)
- Jews of France (71)
- Jews of Haiti (1)
- Jews of India (34)
- Jews of indonesia (5)
- Jews of Iran (302)
- Jews of Iraq (623)
- Jews of Kuwait (6)
- Jews of Lebanon (70)
- Jews of Libya (155)
- Jews of Malaysia (2)
- Jews of Mali (1)
- Jews of Morocco (270)
- Jews of Muslim republics (30)
- Jews of North Africa (35)
- Jews of Pakistan (41)
- Jews of Portugal (1)
- Jews of Singapore (1)
- Jews of Somalia (1)
- Jews of Spain (12)
- Jews of Sudan (7)
- Jews of Syria (150)
- Jews of Tunisia (249)
- Jews of Turkey (103)
- Jews of Venezuela (2)
- Jews of Yemen (229)
- Jews/Berbers (28)
- Judeo-Arab culture (199)
- Judeo-Farsi culture (6)
- Judeo-Turkish culture (2)
- Kurds (68)
- Leftist bias against Jewish rights(108)
- Libyan Jews in Israel (8)
- Media bias (82)
- Moroccan Israelis (28)
- Morocco/Israel (42)
- Non-Arab/non-Muslim minorities(244)
- Persian Israelis (12)
- Sephardi Voices (14)
- Sephardim/ Mizrahim (287)
- Testimonies (121)
- Turkish Israelis (6)
- Yemenite Israelis (27)
Must-Reads
Congress adopts first ever Jewish refugees bill
Jewish refugee bill introduced in Knesset
Knesset to confirm 30 November as Jewish Refugees Memorial Day
Massacres of Jews by Muslims before 1948
Best of Point of No Return
Country By Country
Dhimmi denial
Gina Waldman's story (Libya)
The Truth about the Refugees, with Danny Ayalon
Silent Exodus by Pierre Rehov
Jewish Refugees on Revelation TV
Irwin Cotler on Jewish Refugees
Official expulsion order, Egypt 1956

Blog Archive
- ▼ 2009 (363)
- ▼ July (28)
- Dirty dealings in Deal: scandal rocks Syrian Jews
- How complicit were Arabs with Nazism?
- Jewish leaders hail Moroccan Holocaust speech
- State Department website purges Jewish history
- An Egyptian 'mummy' wrestles with her identity
- Bahrain and Morocco rulers make positive gestures
- Half of Jewish community of Iran expected to leave...
- Tangled web of Jewish ownership in 'Arab' areas
- Jewish girl was abandoned by her family in Egypt
- Yemen Jews protest 'kidnap' of bride
- Turks treat Jews as eternally indebted guests
- Thank goodness for one's religious kinsmen...
- Whatever happened to the Jews exiled to Babylon?
- Shmuel Moreh : from boxer to prizewinning poet
- Jewish culture enjoys a Sephardi renaissance
- Seven Yemeni Jews arrive in New York
- Victor Sanua z''l - a key voice of Egyptian Jewry
- Beirut's Jewish quarter erased by developers
- Jewish bride disappears in Yemen
- What about those Jewish refugees from Arab lands?
- Algeria creates Jewish society for phantom Jews
- Whose Nakba is it anyway?
- Kurdistan won't expel Jews, but can't secure them
- Kasser Shashoua, a Baghdad palace fit for a king
- Jews are a propaganda boon to the Iranian regime
- Iran's Jews are staying mum out of fear
- Arab Jews: like 'mice of the feline persuasion'
- An Israeli-Arab by the waters of Babylon
- ▼ July (28)
General
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps





Comments
Post a Comment