Remembering Menachem Begin: Watch Now
WATCHFILM CLIP >> This week, the Simon Wiesenthal Center commemorates the 29th anniversary of the death of Menachem Begin z"l. From 1977...
The 2021 Simon Wiesenthal Memorial Lecture, entitled The Impact of World War II on Jews in the Middle East and NorthAfrica - was given by Reeva S. Simon, historian and author - in the lead-up to the commemoration of the 1938 Kristallnacht.
Under the auspices of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre in the United Kingdom (SWC-UK) and Harif, the UK-based Association of Jewsfrom the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), this year’s Zoom meeting focused on the still little known history of MENA Jewry’s suffering during the Holocaust.
See on Youtube (for start, bring cursor left to beginning):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6eddSZx8qyk&t=3183s
The Memorial Lecture was opened by Shimon Samuels, Director for International Relations of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, who stressedhow “close we are to the 83rd anniversary of Kristallnacht - the 1938 Night of Broken Glass, Prelude to the Holocaust.”
He recalled that, “thirty miles of the Channel lay between British Jews and the Holocaust on the continent. In the WannseeProtocol, the Nazi death list numbered 11 million throughout Europe... the over 1 million Jews of the Middle East and North Africa region would have been added, if Rommel had wonEl Alamein... The MENA ‘What If Factor’ of history is less widely known, but MENA Jews had their own Kristallnächte. In Iraq, the Farhud. The internment of Libyan Jews and deportation ofEuropean Jewish refugees...”
Lyn Julius, journalist and founder of Harif, author of, “Uprooted: How 3,000 years of Jewish civilization in the Arabworld vanished overnight”, published in several languages and soon to appear in Arabic.
Julius recalled that this was “the third joint Wiesenthal Centre - Harif event, each occasion raising awareness on the plight ofMENA Jews before, during and after World War Two”... In particular, she thanked Reeva Simon for her book “The Jews of the Middle East and North Africa: The Impact of World WarII,” that “fills a huge gap in the knowledge of this obscure part of history and corrects the misconception that Jews of MENA were not affected by Hitler’s war and theHolocaust.”
The Memorial Lecture speaker, Reeva Spector Simon, was former Associate Director of the Middle East Institute at ColumbiaUniversity. Her lecture presented little known facts:
- Hitler’s Mein Kampf was serialized in Arabic newspapers;
- Egyptian Jews boycotted German products in the 1930s;
- Forced labour camps for Jews were present across the Sahara;
- Tel Aviv and Haifa were bombed by Fascist Italian warplanes
- 180 Iraqi Jews were killed overnight in the 1941 Baghdad Farhud;
- Jews in Iran saved children fleeing from Poland;
- Algerian Jews were involved in the Allied invasion of North Africa;
- Jews in Turkey, Syria, Iran and Morocco helped European refugees...
Simon explained how “the story of MENA Jews is an integral part of the World War Two narrative. The Jews of the region went throughbombings and invasions, antisemitic regulations, forced labour and deportations, attacks on Jewish communities and their impoverishment. Despite all, local Jews worked and fought together withthe Allies and provided assistance to refugees escaping from Nazi occupied Europe.”
Her lecture covered the Jewish communities of the MENA region from Morocco to Central Asia, the network of Jewish schools, theintegration within the Muslim world and relationship with the successive rulers...
European colonization began changing the geography and politics of the region, as well as the relationship between Jews and Muslims,by reflex sparking nationalisms against colonial powers, kindled by Nazi Germany... The circle entered a new spate of Nazi-inspired antisemitism...new political movements viewing Hitler’s MeinKampf as a plan of action, Kristallnacht made the Holocaust the objective.
A Q&A session brought in participants who, as children, lived through the dramatic events recounted by Simon. See IsaakSadaka's harrowing personal testimony below.
David Dangoor, Chair of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre in the United Kingdom, who had spent his childhood in Baghdad, closed themeeting. He thanked all “participants and, in particular, Reeva Simon and Lyn Julius for giving, through their books, academic rigour to a subject that is now attracting public interest and mediaattention.”
He added, “today’s initiative will add to a positive change in people’s views, as it goes to the roots of the problems in the MiddleEast, in particular regarding the capacity to tolerate difference.”
Isaac Sadaka - In memory of the Farhud, June 1941
"I hid in a pit to avoid the massacre of the vicious mob, I was bitten by a snake & experienced an agonizing pain. Yet after awhile I gained immunity & the snake bite became a kiss of love. We lived thereafter in harmony & co-existence. After two days of rampage & invasion of the sanctity of our homes by viciouscrowds, engaging in butchering men, women & little children, raping wives & throwing the dead bodies of newly born children into the river.
I did not venture to get out of my hiding pit & look into the eyes of those ugly faces that know no mercy & who had eventuallyescaped justice. I did not want any longer to be an abiding citizen of a country that lacks the moral courage to punish those who were engaged in a barbaric act of heartlesssavagery. A country that lacks the moral obligation to compensate those families who lost their loved ones by shameful criminal acts of treachery & utter barbarism."
For further information contact Dr. Shimon Samuels at csweurope@gmail.com, join the Center on Facebook,or follow @simonwiesenthal for news updates sent directly to your Twitter feed.
The Simon Wiesenthal Center is one of the largest international Jewish human rights organizations with over 400,000 member families in the United States. It is an NGO at international agenciesincluding the United Nations, UNESCO, the OSCE, the OAS, the Council of Europe and the Latin American Parliament (Parlatino).
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