By Stewart Ain
http://www.JewishWorldReview.com | As delegates from 10 countries
gather in New York Sunday for a two-day conference focusing on Jews
displaced from their Arab homelands, there is growing concern that this
issue will not be a priority for the Olmert government when the topic
of Palestinian refugees is raised at the Israeli-Palestinian summit in
Annapolis, Md.
Officials of Justice for Jews from Arab Countries (JJAC), which will
hold steering committee meetings here, insist that any discussion of
the refugee problem must include Jewish refugees as well, since
hundreds of thousands were forced to flee or were expelled, with untold
losses in property. Ironically, the current Israeli government has been
less than supportive of the effort, and the upcoming meeting here may
provide a showdown of sorts since officials of the government will
attend.
Of particular concern were recent comments of Israeli Foreign Minister
Tzipi Livni, who in September told the Knesset that a Palestinian state
is "the integral national solution to the [Palestinian] refugee
problem." She mentioned it again last month at the United Nations, but
on neither occasion did she mention that there were Jewish refugees
whose rights must also be addressed.
Just weeks ago, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert spoke of the
"hardship" Palestinians have endured because of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict but made no mention of the Jews who experienced similar
travail, the organization pointed out.
Silvan Shalom, a prominent Sephardic political leader from the
opposition Likud Party who served as Israeli foreign minister from 2003
to 2006, said he believes the Olmert government is "not committed" to
the issue.
Shalom, who as foreign minister frequently spoke of Jews displaced from
Arab lands, told The Jewish Week: "I think they are not doing it the
same way I did; I think they are less committed."
He said that if it is decided that some compensation is due to
Palestinians who became refugees because of Israel's War of
Independence in 1948, the compensation should also be for Jews
displaced from their Arab homelands.
"There should not be a situation where the Jews of Arab countries are
forgotten," Shalom said. He added that compensation for Jews "should be
based on equal rights and reciprocity" with the Palestinians.
Observers suggest that Livni and other members of the government are
either tone deaf to the cause, primarily advocated by Sephardim, who
make up the majority of Jews in Israel today, or worry that any focus
on refugees will only increase attention on the Palestinian cause.
The fact that Israel absorbed so many refugees, at great expense and
hardship, rather than leave them languishing, should not be used
against Israel, say officials of JJAC.
To strengthen their case for the displaced Jews, Stan Urman, the
group's executive director, said that while perusing United Nations
archives to examine press coverage of this issue, he came across a
front page article in the New York Times, dated May 16, 1948. The
headline of the article was "Jews in Grave Danger in All Moslem Lands."
The article cited a law drafted by the Arab League that said the
900,000 Jews living in Arab countries would be considered "members of
the Jewish minority state of Palestine." It said their bank accounts
would be frozen and used to finance resistance to "Zionist ambitions in
Palestine." Jews believed to be active Zionists would be interred and
their assets confiscated. And it also detailed how Jews were being
persecuted in different Arab countries.
"The Arab world today practices four Nos," Urman said. "It says there
was never any large Jewish population in Arab states, that they were
not ill treated, that they left of their own free will without leaving
any property behind, and that they have no right to compensation."
The Arab League document, he said, demonstrates that those denials are
"blatant falsehoods."
"We have the evidence that the political community of the Arab League
in 1947 colluded among all seven Arab states to persecute their Jewish
populations and to use them as weapons against the State of Israel,"
Urman said. "I have a litany of legislation adopted by Arab countries
that mirror the draft law — stripping Jews of their citizenship and
taking away their right to vote and own property."
For an Israeli-Palestinian peace to be "durable and enduring, it must
resolve issues of relevance to all parties," Urman added. "To move
forward to reconciliation we need truth and justice, just as South
Africa set up commissions at which the whites had to admit the way they
persecuted the black majority. It must be recognized that the Jews were
also victims of the Arab-Israeli conflict and that the first injustice
was the mass violation of human rights of Jews in Arab countries. We
can't allow a second injustice."
Urman said the issue of Palestinian refugees will be on the table at
Annapolis "and we want to make sure that the plight and flight of Jews
from Arab countries is also on the table."
In addition, Urman said Washington lawmakers are examining two
resolutions that say any explicit reference to Palestinian refugees
must be matched by a reference to Jewish and Christian and other
refugees.
Original
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