There
has been an uninterrupted presence of large Jewish communities
in the Middle East from time immemorial. The ancient Jewish communities
of the Middle East and North Africa (including in the Land of
Israel) has existed for over 2,500 years before the birth of the
modern Arab states.
One
thousand years before the advent of Islam, Jews in substantial
numbers resided in what are today Arab countries. For centuries
under Islamic rule, following the Moslem conquest of the region,
Jews were considered "dhimmis", or second-class citizens.
But they were nonetheless permitted limited religious, educational,
professional, and business opportunities.
It
is within the last 55 years that the world witnessed the mass
displacement of over 850,000 long-time Jewish residents from the
totalitarian regimes, the brutal dictatorships and monarchies
of Syria, Trans-Jordan, Egypt, Lebanon, Yemen, Iran, Iraq, Algeria,
Tunisia and Morocco.
The rise of pan-Arabism and independence movements in the 20th
century resulted in an orchestrated, multi-state campaign against
Zionism. These states vehemently opposed the establishment of
a homeland for the Jewish people. Hundreds of thousands of Jews
resident in Arab countries were ensnared in this struggle.
Immediately
before and after its declaration of statehood, the Arab world
sought to destroy the newly created State of Israel between 1948-49.
The rights and security of Jews resident in Arab countries came
under legal and physical assault by governments and the general
populations. In Syria, anti-Jewish pogroms erupted in Aleppo in
1947. Of the town’s 10,000 Jews 7,000 fled in terror. In
Iraq, "Zionism" became a capital crime. More than 70
Jews were killed by bombs in the Jewish Quarter of Cairo, Egypt.
After the French left Algeria, the authorities issued a variety
of anti-Jewish decrees that prompted nearly all of the 160,000
Jews to flee the country. After the 1947 United Nations General
Assembly Resolution on the Partition Plan, Muslim rioters engaged
in bloody pogroms in Aden and Yemen, which killed 82 Jews. In
numerous countries, Jews were expelled or had their citizenship
revoked (e.g. Libya). Varying numbers of Jews fled from 10 Arab
countries. They became refugees in a region overwhelmingly hostile
to Jews.
State-sanctioned restraints, often coupled with violence and repression,
precipitated a mass displacement of Jews. While the results were
similar, life became untenable and Jews were displaced from some
10 countries throughout the Middle East and North Africa. This
caused the Jewish refugee problem in the Middle East.
The result: over 850,000 Jews were uprooted from the lands where
they and their ancestors had lived for generations.