https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jewish-refugees-from-arab-countries - Although much is heard about the plight of the Palestinian refugees from the aftermath of the 1948 Israeli War of Independence and the 1967 Six Day War, little is said about the hundreds of thousands of Jews who were forced to flee from Arab states before and after the creation of Israel. In fact, these refugees were largely forgotten because they were assimilated into their new homes, most in Israel, and neither the United Nations nor any other international agency took up their cause or demanded restitution for the property and money taken from them. Legislation passed in the Knesset during 2015 designated November 30 as a day of recognition for Jewish refugees from Arab countries.
In 1945, roughly 1 million Jews lived peacefully in the various Arab states of the Middle East, many of them in communities that had existed for thousands of years. After the Arabs rejected the United Nations decision to partition Palestine and create a Jewish state, however, the Jews of the Arab lands became targets of their own governments’ anti-Zionist fervor. As Egypt’s delegate to the UN in 1947 chillingly told the General Assembly: “The lives of one million Jews in Muslim countries will be jeopardized by partition.” The dire warning quickly became the brutal reality.
Throughout 1947 and 1948, Jews in Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, Libya, Morocco, Syria, and Yemen (Aden) were persecuted, their property and belongings were confiscated, and they were subjected to severe anti-Jewish riots instigated by the governments. In Iraq, Zionism was made a capital crime. In Syria, anti-Jewish pogroms erupted in Aleppo and the government froze all Jewish bank accounts. In Egypt, bombs were detonated in the Jewish quarter, killing dozens. In Algeria, anti-Jewish decrees were swiftly instituted and in Yemen, bloody pogroms led to the death of nearly 100 Jews.
In January 1948, the president of the World Jewish Congress, Dr. Stephen Wise, appealed to U.S. Secretary of State George Marshall: “Between 800,000 and a million Jews in the Middle East and North Africa, exclusive of Palestine, are in ‘the greatest danger of destruction’ at the hands of Moslems being incited to holy war over the Partition of Palestine ... Acts of violence already perpetrated, together with those contemplated, being clearly aimed at the total destruction of the Jews, constitute genocide, which under the resolutions of the General Assembly is a crime against humanity." In May 1948, the New York Times echoed Wise’s appeal, and ran an article headlined, "Jews in Grave Danger in all Muslim Lands: Nine Hundred Thousand in Africa and Asia face wrath of their foes."
With their lives in danger and the situation growing ever more perilous, the Jews of the Arab World fled their homes as refugees.
Of the 820,000 Jewish refugees between 1948 and 1972, more than 200,000 found refuge in Europe and North America while 586,000 were resettled in Israel
In 1945, roughly 1 million Jews lived peacefully in the various Arab states of the Middle East, many of them in communities that had existed for thousands of years. After the Arabs rejected the United Nations decision to partition Palestine and create a Jewish state, however, the Jews of the Arab lands became targets of their own governments’ anti-Zionist fervor. As Egypt’s delegate to the UN in 1947 chillingly told the General Assembly: “The lives of one million Jews in Muslim countries will be jeopardized by partition.” The dire warning quickly became the brutal reality.
Throughout 1947 and 1948, Jews in Algeria, Egypt, Iraq, Libya, Morocco, Syria, and Yemen (Aden) were persecuted, their property and belongings were confiscated, and they were subjected to severe anti-Jewish riots instigated by the governments. In Iraq, Zionism was made a capital crime. In Syria, anti-Jewish pogroms erupted in Aleppo and the government froze all Jewish bank accounts. In Egypt, bombs were detonated in the Jewish quarter, killing dozens. In Algeria, anti-Jewish decrees were swiftly instituted and in Yemen, bloody pogroms led to the death of nearly 100 Jews.
In January 1948, the president of the World Jewish Congress, Dr. Stephen Wise, appealed to U.S. Secretary of State George Marshall: “Between 800,000 and a million Jews in the Middle East and North Africa, exclusive of Palestine, are in ‘the greatest danger of destruction’ at the hands of Moslems being incited to holy war over the Partition of Palestine ... Acts of violence already perpetrated, together with those contemplated, being clearly aimed at the total destruction of the Jews, constitute genocide, which under the resolutions of the General Assembly is a crime against humanity." In May 1948, the New York Times echoed Wise’s appeal, and ran an article headlined, "Jews in Grave Danger in all Muslim Lands: Nine Hundred Thousand in Africa and Asia face wrath of their foes."
With their lives in danger and the situation growing ever more perilous, the Jews of the Arab World fled their homes as refugees.
Of the 820,000 Jewish refugees between 1948 and 1972, more than 200,000 found refuge in Europe and North America while 586,000 were resettled in Israel
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NewsTranscript
00:00 The Jewish communities of Lebanon, Syria, of Iraq, of Tunis, of Libya, of Morocco were
00:07 expelled and 700,000 Jewish refugees came to Israel between 1948 and 1950.
00:15 One of the success stories of our time is the ability of the small Israeli population
00:20 of 800,000 to absorb this massive wave of refugees and integrate them as citizens of
00:26 Israel.
00:33 This stands in sharp contrast to the problems which the Arab nations with their huge expanse
00:40 and their great wealth had, integrating the three 400,000 Arab persons who were displaced
00:46 as a result of the Arab-Israel war in 1948.
00:51 The reason there was an Arab refugee problem is because countries which previously had
00:55 been host countries for Arab migration, with its oil resources which had always received
01:00 Palestinian Arabs, decided that Arab immigrants who came to these countries as a result of
01:06 the war were now refugees, were to be segregated into camps, were not to be given citizenship.
01:13 The Palestine refugee problem is an absolute anomaly in history.
01:18 Other refugee problems end either tragically in that the population is completely decimated
01:24 or it ends historically, they're displaced, they move elsewhere, or they find some form
01:29 of a homeland.
01:30 One of those solutions has appeared for all the other major refugee problems in the world.
01:35 The Palestinian refugee problem remained the way it is for more than three generations
01:40 because the Arab countries wished it to be that way.
01:43 None of them was willing to accept the fact of Israel.
01:47 So they kept alive a fiction that Israel would be eliminated and therefore the refugees should
01:52 sit where they were until the day would come when they would be able to overthrow Israel
01:57 and retrieve their nation.
01:58 Now since '67 at least it has been clear to all the Arab countries that that was not
02:04 going to happen.
02:05 Yet it was a cynical political process that they kept alive, the greatest victims of which
02:11 were the Palestinians throughout.
02:13 The PLO was established in 1964 as a product of two currents.
02:22 One new consciousness rising among young refugees, mostly in Gaza, the Gaul states, and Egypt,
02:28 who looked for some new Palestinian leadership.
02:32 The other was the need of President Nasser of Egypt to find a new vehicle for the fights
02:37 against Israel.
02:39 Him being quite conscious that conventional war wouldn't do.
02:43 And thus the idea of using a terrorist war, which was very much in vogue in those days,
02:49 Cuba, Vietnam, Algeria, was quite appealing.
02:52 And he made use of those young Palestinian enthusiasts.
02:56 So you have here a movement which is on the one hand motivated quite sincerely by Palestinian
03:03 themselves and yet manipulated all along by those powers in the Arab world who had an
03:10 interest in doing so.
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