By STEPHEN FARRELL
BAGHDAD — “I have no future here to stay.”
Written in broken English but with perfect clarity, the message is a
stark and plaintive assessment from one of the last Jews of Babylon.
The community of Jews in Baghdad is now all but vanished in a land
where their heritage recedes back to Abraham of Ur, to Jonah’s
prophesying to Nineveh, and to Nebuchadnezzar’s sending Jews into exile
here more than 2,500 years ago.
Just over half a century ago, Iraq’s Jews numbered more than 130,000.
But now, in the city that was once the community’s heart, they cannot
muster even a minyan, the 10 Jewish men required to perform some of the
most important rituals of their faith. They are scared even to
publicize their exact number, which was recently estimated at seven by
the Jewish Agency for Israel, and at eight by one Christian cleric.
That is not enough to read the Torah in public, if there were anywhere
in public they would dare to read it, and too few to recite a proper
Kaddish for the dead.
Among those who remain is a former car salesman who describes himself
as the “rabbi, slaughterer and one of the leaders of the Jewish
community in Iraq.”
Although many of his Muslim friends and immediate neighbors know he is
Jewish (“I’m proud, I’m Jewish, not ashamed. I’m not hiding,” he wrote
at one point.), he was wary of being named because it could draw more
dangerous attention to him or his friends. To protect him, he is
referred to as Saleh’s grandson, because his or his father’s name would
be too easily recognizable here. Interviews with him were conducted by
correspondence over the course of several months.
He lamented that Jews in Baghdad had had no meeting place since the
Meir Tweig synagogue, the last in the city, was closed in 2003, after
it became too dangerous to gather openly.
“I do my prayer in my house because we closed the synagogue from the
war until now. If we open it, it will be a target,” he wrote, adding
later: “I have no future here, I can’t marry, there is no girl. I can’t
put my kova on my head out of the house. If I’m out of Iraq, I’ll share
with people in all our feasts and do my prayer in the synagogue and
will be with my family.”
Now in his early 40s, he exists as anonymously and discreetly as he
can. He cannot reliably hide his religion: it is stamped on his
official identity card, which he must present at any security
checkpoint. So he stays mainly in his own neighborhood, protected by
Muslim neighbors who have been family friends for decades.
He is a very cautious man. After contact with him was first established
through an intermediary, and his identity was confirmed by his family
abroad, he consented to speak directly for only a few moments over the
telephone. Even that was just to propose a safer way to correspond,
under a version of his name different from the one that other Iraqis
know.
His fears are all too real in a city where bodies are still found
dumped in the street almost daily, despite a fall in the overall death
toll.
Christians, a far larger group, have fled Iraq by the thousands, and
even Sunni and Shiite Muslims, who live among millions of their
fellows, remain fearful of religious and sectarian fanatics.
Jews were once a wealthy and politically active part of the spectrum of
Iraq. In a fading red volume of the Iraq Directory of 1936, the
“Israelite community,” then numbering about 120,000, is listed along
with Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen, Muslims, Christians, Yazidis and Sabeans.
Rescued from a Baghdad library, this book lists Hebrew among the six
languages of Iraq and describes a country in which “the mosque stands
beside the church and the synagogue.”
However, the directory predates decades of trauma: the 1941 Farhud
pogrom in which more than 130 Jews were killed during the Feast of
Shavuot, World War II, the Holocaust, the anti-Zionism of Saddam
Hussein and the post-2003 rise of Islamic militants.
Most traces of Jews are now gone beside the Prat and the Hidekel
rivers, the Hebrew names for the Euphrates and Tigris. Baghdad’s Jewish
quarter, in Taht al-Takia, is no more. And about 80 miles south of
Baghdad lies the Hebrew-inscribed tomb of the Prophet Ezekiel, “son of
Buzi.” During a visit there on Saturday, dozens of Muslim pilgrims
filed through the well-tended shrine, its interior blackened by
centuries of lamp smoke, to honor Ezekiel as a respected prophet.
Among these fragments of their civilization live the moribund huddle of
holdouts.
Saleh’s grandson is now alone. His mother died two decades ago, his
older brother left in 1991, and his father, now 87, was among the last
handful of Jews taken from Iraq by the Jewish Agency after 2003,
reducing the current community to single figures.
Most of his other relatives departed in 1951, among more than 100,000
Jews who fled Iraq between 1949 and 1952, in the years after the state
of Israel was created. Their exodus was code named “Operation Ezra and
Nehemiah,” after the Jewish leaders who took their people back to
Jerusalem from exile in Babylon beginning in 597 B.C.
Some of the remaining handful of Iraqi Jews are middle class, including
two doctors. Others, including Saleh’s grandson, are poor and
unemployed, dependent on handouts.
“We see each other if there is something necessary, like a death, or to
discuss some important things, or if someone needs help,” he wrote. “We
take care about the people in the Jewish community only, not the half
or part-Jewish. We don’t know about them after they left us.”
Some Jews say they are too old to leave. Some do not want to leave
their friends behind.
The few remaining Jews ignore the entreaties of worried relatives and
friends abroad and await an unlikely renaissance, demographic
extinction or a more sudden end.
Concern for their safety rose two years ago when one of them, a
middle-aged man, was kidnapped. They have no idea whether he was taken
because he was Jewish, wealthy, or whether the abduction was random.
“We don’t know anything about him, and don’t know the reason,” Saleh’s
grandson said.
His relatives voice frustration at his insistence on remaining in Iraq,
saying he cannot be persuaded to relinquish the family home. He wants
to sell it for $300,000 to help build a new life abroad but has had no
takers.
“I talk with him all the time,” said his older brother, who lives in
Europe and requested anonymity to protect his brother. “I call him
every two weeks, and always I give him advice to leave, because it is
dangerous, and because he needs to build his life and to find a wife.”
The family argues that if buyers were going to come forward they would
have done so long ago. They say that in Iraq’s current instability, an
unscrupulous buyer could simply steal the money back, knowing that
Saleh’s grandson would have no recourse without a tribe to protect him.
“Now there is nobody buying because of the situation in Sadr City,” his
brother said. “I keep telling him, ‘Money is nothing.’ ”
The Jewish Agency for Israel, an organization that arranges immigration
to the Holy Land, has offered to relocate the entire group. “Should the
remaining Jews in Baghdad request to immigrate to Israel, the Jewish
Agency will immediately facilitate this request and also take care of
their absorption needs in Israel,” said Zeev Bielski, the agency’s
chairman.
However, Michael Jankelowitz, an agency spokesman, conceded: “They are
not interested in leaving. Their philosophy is, ‘We are old, no one is
affecting our day-to-day life. If we have to leave, we know how to
contact the Jewish Agency.’ ”
The holdout’s father says that he regrets leaving Iraq, the country of
his birth, five years ago, but that he would not return in the current
dangerous climate.
“Why did we have to leave?” he said, sighing. “In Iraq I was always
with my friends. Everyone was very, very, very, very nice. I had Muslim
friends for 50 to 60 years. They were friends, like family. I used to
spend more time with Arabs than Jews.”
His son says he knows the risks. “I’d like to leave, but I have my
house, I can’t leave it,” he wrote. “I have no future here to stay.”
He insists that he has responsibilities to his fellow Iraqi Jews, no
matter how few in number.
“If I’m faithful in GOD, I’m not afraid of anything,” he wrote, “and
GOD BLESS ME.”
Original
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